— — ——
Vol ee . 8 nupolayr, ALBERTA, FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1912,
7
Le
x MADER REALTY SrooK.
_ ACCIDENT, iE RECORD RUN HOLDERS MEETING
7
one Quite Badly Hurt and The meeting of the Redeliff
Two Others Shaken p _ Brick & Coal Company Turned | Realty Company stockholders
Last Saturday. | The Redcliff Foot Ball team!) Out the Largest Number was held last Friday. Dy. C. H.
— will play the C. P. R.’s on the} of Brick in its Kohler, Dr. R. R. Stoner, W. T.
Nr. W. P. Lockwood, who | Medicine Hat grounds Satur- History. Lockwood and H. O. Wheeler,
Hy : day evening. All those who :
pie 5 Sy e like to see a foot ball game and A record run was made last business was transacted. The
tae the purpose of taking a want to see Redcliff win should | Monday by the Redeliff Myrick officers of the company remain
gontl Xe 2 n Liverpool, tako n trip down to tho Hat & Coal Company, turning out the same, except that Mr.
Eng, to the town down the riv- that evening. 92,000 brick in a 13-hour run. Wheeler and Mr. Lovkwood
er, met with what might have 3 This is the largest number of change places, Mr. Wheeler
been a very sovidasCeecident;| Dr. R. R. Stoner made a trip brick ever turned out by this beeoming secretary and Mr.
When he got to tho hill bo- to Regina this week. He re- company in any one day. Lockwood treasurer,
tween here and the Hat and turned today, 85 The company is selling their Dr. Stoner has been put in
started to go down, he attempt- 1 brick as fast as they can make charge of the sale of town lots
ed to Apply the brakes but they L. Bjarnvold, who has been them, they having sold all the within the townsite and Mr.
wouldhot work and the ma- employed by the Alberta Orna- stock that it made last winter. Lockwood will have charge of
chine Went. over the ombatik- | mental Iron Company as a The company has been ship- the gas wells and all well
men Mr. John Q. Landis, Pattern maker, has returned to ing un average of six cats of drilling. Mr. Wheeler,’ as the
who Went along for a. ride, Mr. Minneapolis, where he expects| brick a day for the past three secretary, will have general
~Lockwood, the owner of the to stay until about the first of months. ‘ charge of the local office and
machine, and the English gen! October, when he will return Two of the eight new. kilns look after the Comvany’s num—
tlemen Who did care to give to Redoliff with his family. the company has been, building , buildings, both resiaences
his name, landed in the ditch; are finished and tha other six und business, and have cherge
below with the machine. Mr. Wm. McLean and Joe Tarrant) will be completed very short- of and other building opera-
Landis Was quite badly hurt | Were seen out walking with ally, tions the company may under-
by having the machine fall couple of young ladies the A fire broke out in the plant
over on him, breaking his other night. Now this is noth- this week but with the excel-
collar bone and two ribs. Mr. | img unusual for Joe but to see lent fire protection the com-
Lockwood had his back hurt Bill walking with a young lady | pany has it was soon put with-
and one of his legs bruised but Was certainly a treat. Can it out doing any damage to speak
was not otherwise hurt. The be possible that he is thinking) of. : }
other gentleman only received of foresaking the rest of us The plant is now working 18
a couple or slight bruises. The bachelors. hours a day for three day in
machine was badly damaged, the week.
5 in a r he 5
Church Notes.
The Rey. Mr. Gordon, who,
with Mrs. Gordon, attended
the meeting of the general as-
sembly of the Presbyterian
church in Canada ut Edmon-
ton, returned to town on Tues-
day, and will officiate at public
worship on Sunday at Bowell
at 3p, m. and at. Redcliff at 8
ie 2 p. m. 7 4
1 2 : A number of very important
hg seer) The following marke were 3 ike attention
Iron Com-| obtained by the pupils of a Mr.
WBA) Grades: Sve nad eight during|Gadte sin scsok con
’ aid the past week: * ‘Will speak on some
_ Robt. who left os ae „ His, bath.
bout the first of last 2 Hazel Orrent & =
© | to visit his old home in Scot- Clarinda Clare. 80
7
100 Arsen ;
95 A lot for a parish house or
will land, returned to Redeliff this Ralp 8 88 92 manse has been kindly donated
| week.” He said he hada-ploas-|Wecion Riddell. 76 40 by the Redcliff Realty Com
ant time in the old country but
Ross McKay..... 64 "| Pany to the trustees of Presby-
was glad to get back to Red- 9
M. Hawthorne... 12 . |terian church here. The inten-
GRADE EIGHT. tion is to begin the erection of
3 Geometry.
Elsie Clare ee 5 the hott ee
HOUSE
' er Two Million Acres
that he has been erecting Tax Revis- — More Under Crop
for the Realty Company ion Board. 3
house is on the hill and is built f „ Vice-President Bury of the C. P. R.,
bungalow style, d n The e ik uli an in an interview in Vancouver last
pall are Mr. R. J. Crighton, manager Nn e eee
f a tax revision board on Mon- had been rather backward, it is
of the Western Insurance Un- oo n rather wa es.
—
day, June 24th, at 3 p. m., at the | timated that there are 18,200,000 acres
Immigrati on to 0 8 5 5 2 via ocean pany’s plant with Haw on a
year Bog . lowing them a special rate on
86,283 for April last year, an increase | the plant.
117 per cent. —— ö
5 . of arrivals from the Mr. E. H. Sellhorn left for
United States for April, 1912, was 21.- Regina and Saskatoon Wednes-
day night, to be gone for a few
404, as against 12 1 0 April,
1011, an ineredsg of 21 Per cent.
Ph tated 4 days,
Mr. J. King, of Regina, is in
ro Hold a
Revision Bill
Bazar Thursaay| _
Tue Ladies Aid will hold a op vomtcctatincs voted yee
for the
month was 62,088. During the cor-
responding month last year it was
_ 51,680, au increase of 22
VIEW went to press but notices
place. bill will again go to confereuce,
7 sa a
§TEADY SHOWES
WILL NOT) ~ OF ASH
| Vascouven, June !
on the Steamer
no big brush fires were witnessed,
IFF REVIEW
were present. A good deal of
them at service on the Sab- held. Mr:
Goes Back
ES veys for double-tracking the
N | nated cost of 860,000,000.
| pert. witnessed’ a wonderful phenom- Extension of
“youte, as | honor at the Royal Colonial Institute
— . — en om — «My
Va
NUMBER 24
VANCOUVER, WHAT TO
Mr. Kelly Arrived 3 Red - SAY ABOUT
cliff Yesterday After a : REDCLIFF
Short Western Trip.
RETURNS FROM
Prosideut Hubert Kelly, of| HOMIE situate the
the Albertu Ornamental Iron miles east of Calgary, on the
Company, returned to this city banks of the Saskatchewan
yosterday morning after mak- river. :
ing a short business trip to
Vancouver. He said business
was good in Vancouver and Ae nenn th 5
that he expected a good deal of ments of as N e
ornamental iron buiness from as may be made for manu-
that city for the ornamental | facturing purposes,
iron works in this city. Worki
Mr. E. T. Byrnes, who has orking coal mines on
charge of the Calgary branch 3 8
Office of the company, accom-|out yet unexplored.
panied Mn Kelly to Redoliff.
Mr. Kelly left last night for] Brick and other clay pro-
eaktern points and expects to ducts ave manufactured ex-
[be in e in. few tensively and additional en-
at jterprises for this line of in-
ys. dust ry are in contemplation.
Natural gas is probably
Redcliff's first and greatest
PENTLAND- The business houses and
g residences “actic
TAVENER. of brick homo product
Sili
To the home of Mr. Alfred E. Fr hecvagd Ar
Pentland at Bowell there gath- lent quality for glass making,
ered.on Wednesday afternoon, | » —— .
June 12,a merry and friendly], Industrial sites are donated
company to witness his mar- to now enterprises,
riage to Miss Florence Ametia gu N f x
rround territory ie in
Tavener, The ceremony Was the heart of Albertas wheat
performed by the Rev. G. Law. belt, and there are no more
son Gordon in the parlor, and
prosperous farmers in the
thereaftér the guests to the
world than here,
number of 34 or more sat down siete cele Nn
in a large tent to partake of a EADY HAS
sumptuous dinner. Before the A flonr mill that will grind
78,000 bushels of wheat per
month or 936,000 bushels per
year...
party brok up ice cream’ Was
served. The many valuable
gifts testified to thé esteem in
Which the bride and groom are
Péntland, who is},
ity Lumber Company, ns“
taken n
public affairs and the welfare
the community ever since his
arrival there.
A ornamental fron
JUDGE DAY One protestant chareh, _
4 OPTIMISTIC) ne, use thors
modern Hel e 85
Judge Day, president of the Equit-
able Life, who has just returned to
system, and mains
and Canada, speaks to interviewers | Out the city.
most optimistically. What he says is
noteworthy, as he presides over a} . ‘
company investing large sums an- An anand half W of
nually, and its accumulated funds at more than half a million a
— — 28 7 : „a municipal tax levy of
8 3 derwriters association, with offices of the town site owners. under crop in the prairie provinces elon’ Or ibe — N the gg mills. :
9 offices at Calgary, was in Red: All those interested are re- 3 3 pia said: “I crossed the provinces off . f ood 4
esday i aaa mo. +. There katchewan, Alberta and Manitoba ne a three-story mod-
„ eee ee alen de eee 10,500,008 ee eee this year, roger and was amazed at the ern brick hotel as there is in
changes which had been wrought in the west.
| the last eight years. For hundreds of — 1
miles I passed through wheat fields, A perfect system of water
appeared to be of uniform excellence| mountain springs.
and condition, I talked in Oalgary 8
‘ ¥Yland Winnipeg with grain raisers, 27,48
bazar next Thursday afternoon 144 to 101 not to accept the senate | grain Kr millers, and they 6 1 1 Cen
and evening, June 20th. It | amendment to the metal taritf revis-| predict the greatest yield of wheat in 5 a
had not heen decided where it tou bill which would sweet the Oan-| the history of Western Canada. tesseatttes se dig: ie eee PRS
i N Sy adlan reciprocity pact and fix à uni- ae
was to be held when the Rer- a af GEA ion dae anne
fa The house accepted two senate}
will be posted in the stores and amendments reducing the duty on
public places announcing the pig iron and on certain alloys. The
just two years ago.
660,000,000 for
Double-Tracking | COMMERCIAL
anounced last erde mon | PRINTING
ing in Montreal plans for sur-
Canadian Pacific through the X
Rocky mountains at un esti-
Letter Heads
Statements
Bill Heads
Env
Toronto, June 1l. At the annual | clopes
meeting et the Ontario Poshiuasters“ Cards
association, being held h today,
President Scott dealt with extra.
Work entailed on postmasters asa re-
sult of the rural mail delivery and the
great growth of advertising matter
and publications, which did not in-
crease the revenue of the country
postmaster, He advocated extension
Parcels Post
. | would increase their prevenue, The
association now 8,800 numbers.
of London, Eng, on July 1th, ‘
New York after a trip over the States An excellent 8 a
which, as far as the eye could reach,|works—water pure as the
1 *
e
*
— — * — a — — —
C.P.R. ‘CALGARY SHOPS
Great Car Shops to be Erected by the
C.P.R. at Calgary, to be Known
l as The Ogden Shops.
——
The gheat car shops whieh the Can.
adian Pacific Railway Co. is erecting
near Calgary, Alberta, will rank am-
ongst the biggest undertakings of
Canada’s great. transcontinental road.
They are happily named the Ogden
Shops” in honor of Mr, 1. G. Ogden,
one of the vice-presidents of the com-
pany, and the town which will grow
up around them is also to be called
Ogden. The shops are of course, to
be of the most modern construction
and equipment, and will consist of a
group of twenty buildings, and occu:
py an area of 120 acres of land, the
locomotive works alone covering
from six to eight acres, The Ogden
shops; are intended by the C.P.R. to
provide for the repairs to equipment
on its Western lines, That they will
have plenty of work to do is evidenc-
ed from the fact that the Canadian
Pacific Railway makes it a point to
completely overhaul its rolling stock
at least once a year. This.company
does. this so that its equipment may
always be in the highest possible
state of efficiency. A few years ago
the Angus shops at Montreal and the
shops at Winnipeg were sufficient for
this work, but the C. & P.R.'’s equip-
ment has increased so greatly within
last few years, that the Ogden shops
are a necessity. Between two and
three thousand men will be employed,
and they will be systematically hous-
ed on &@ modern plan that will make
the town of Ogden one. of the World's
model hives of industry and an ideal
residential place for the workingman.
The naming_of the shops after Mr.
A. A. P. MeDOWELL.
A. A. PF. MeDowell publisher of the
Press, at Daysland, Alberta, is a na-
tive of Ontario, having been born at
ilsonburg in 1866. Shoftiy after
the publitation of the Liberal began,
by Dresser & McGuire, the subjpet
of this sketch began the mastery of
the printers’ art, and when William
McGuire -assumed entire charge. of
the Liberal remained with him, put-
ting in more than four years in on
office. He was afterwards employ
ed on the Tillsonburg Observer,
spent some time on the Pacific Coast
where he was employed in Seattle
and Whatcom (now Bellingham).
In the latter place he had charge of
the job department in the office of
the Reveille, but gave up the post-
tion to return to Ontario just pre-
vious to his mother’s death in. the
fall of 1889. In 1890 and 1891 he
served as foreman in the office of
the Herald-Record at Wallaceburg,
| Ont, then went to Michigan, accept-
‘ing a position on the Enterprise at
Cass ‘City and in the following year
In 1894 he became sole owner of the
Enterprise and continued buch un.
til the spring of 1906, whey he sold
his business interests to a competi-
tor and came to Alberta. He at
first accepted a position in the office
of the Edmonton Bulletin, first in
the news room and later in the job
department. In the fall of 1906 he
went as foreman in the office of the
Mail (now defunct) at Camrose, re-
naining until the spring of 1907, when
o lookted in Daysland and.commen-
ced the publication of the Press,
then the only paper between Cam-
rose and Saskatoon, either on the
C. P. R. or the G. T. P. Not wit hstand -
buying a half interest in that paper. |
Ogden is a particularly happy choice | lutz the fact that now nearly every
— Sir ee Shaughnessy, for that town on both those lines of railway
gentleman is one of the real old has a paper of its own, the Press
guard of the C:P.R., a veteran in- continues to hold a good patronage
deed, having for thirty-one years giv-|8"d has moved to very desirable
en the best of his talents to the com- duarters of its own, on one of tho
pany's service. very. best corners in town. This
A New Yorker by birth, belonging has only been possible because of
to a family of financiers, his fore-| the editor's high ideals of journalism
fathers having been banker# Mr. Og-| and his determination to carry them
den has spent the larger portion of out as far as can be made practical
his busy life in the finance depart-
ments of railways. In 1871 he became
paymaster and accountant of the
Chicago & Pacific Railway and
five years later was auditor of that
company. The high reputation he
gained with the C. & P.R. attracted at-
tention towards him, and at the birth
of the Canadian Pacific Railway Com-
pany in 1881 he was selected to take
charge of the finances of the western
division of the road, with headquar-
ters at Winnipeg. Two years excel-
lent work in the west was followed
by his promotion to the position of
chief auditor of the entire system,
the higher title of controller being
bestowed upon him in 1887. Other
honors quickly followed, and in 1901
he was made vice-president of the
Company, having naturally the fin-
ances of the large corporation parti-
cularly unde his charge.
During all these years Mr. Ogden
displayed rare financial ability and
in so small a town in so new a dis-
trict. It is generally’ recognized as
being one of the best local weeklies
in Alberta,
Internally and Externally it
Good.—-The crowning property of Dr,
Thomas’ Electric Oil is that it can be
used internally for many complaints
us well as externally, For sore
throat, croup, whooping cough, pains!
in the chest, colic, and many kindre1l}
ailments it has curative qualities that
ure unsurpassed. A bottle of it
costs little and there is no loss in al-
ways having it at hand.
No Unusual Sight.
Mr. Newlyrich (who has at Iasi
manoeuvred his ruby ring under the
eyes of the great foreign banker)—
Ah, baron, I see you've at last noticed
my beautiful rubies!
The Baron (sadly-——Ach, yes! Dey
make me think of home, I haf a
Aoumen, and in thé struggling days mantlepfeth of. dem dere,—Sketch.
of the company—and there were not
a few of them in the eighties d the
early ninetiés—his advice an
C.P.R. over many a financial diffi-
culty. His work, indeed, would form
a
P. R.
In having the Companf’s huge
works at the foothills of the Canadian
Rockies named after him, Mr. Ogden
“rhave always wondered,” said’ the
kniow-| néwly-arrived missionary to the gen-
ledge materially aided in tiding the ial cannibal, “what
became of my
predecessor.”
“Oh, he,” returned the cannibal—
lense part of the history of the C. he has gone into the interior.”
Did you hear about Pickleham?”
“No.”
“He went home last night and
is paid a justly deserved tribute—a broke up the furniture and a lot of
tribute none the less to his many ex-
cellent qualities of head and heart
than to-his great financial genius and
to hig long years of loyalty and faith-
fulness to the great corporation with
ls
which he has been associated from ita a model
| dishes and chased his wife out into
the street.”
“What was the matter with him?”
“Why, some woman in one of these
uffrage meetings alluded.to him as
husband.“ Cleveland Plain
infancy, and with which he has grown | Dealer.
to’ see it take the foremost place am-
ongst the great transportation com-
panies of the world.
—
Mother Graves’ Worm Exterminator
- will drive worms from i system
without injury to. the child, because
co * While fully effective, is
mild,
— —
When Oranges Were Taboo in Hol-
land.
Oranges were for some years a pro-
hibited fruit in Holland. When the
Batavian republic was established the
“My dad knows mor'n George Wash-
ington did” said the small boy.
“How's that?” queried the grocer.
“Last night,” continued the smal!
boy, when I teld dad I hadn't beou
skatin’ he said he knew'd better, an’
gimme a lichin’ fer flyin’. George
Wushington: couldn't tell a lie, but
dad kin tell one the minute her hears
It. Chicago Socialist.
Six horses draw the State coach of
the Lord Mayor; and its weight is
3 tons 16 hundredweights,
badge ahd color of the Stadholder’s
family became so hateful to the popu-
lar varty that not satisfied with ex-
Canada possesses over 1,200 news-
papers; of which 117 are published
pelling their prince, they passed a
law forbidding the sale of oranges
and carrots, ahd ordering all persons
ho grew lilies or marigolds in their
gardens to pluck up the plants and
destroy them. This prohibition re-
mained in force until 1806, when Na-
poleon made his brother Louis King
of Holland London Chronicle.
Ancient Well Uncovered, ‘
An ancient well hag been uncovd¥-
ed during excavations at the old
Castle of Ardrossan, Ayrshire, 4
flight of twenty-seven steps led down
to it, and the water was clear and
wholesome though the well has been
covered fcr. centuries.
Nearly half of the fatal accidents
in coal mines aro due to falling rock
wr coal and less than one-fourth to
explosions or fires.
Ausvria-Hungary has the least tele-
phone service, in proportion to popu-
lation, of any Bu ean country.
CLEAN HANDS
daily.
Nothing To Regret.
“You find a vein of humor some-
TILK REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA,
*
MOONEY MAKES Tun CRISPRST,
“LET MOONEY DO II“
COREAMIEST BISCUIT
”
‘Thousands of people all over Western Canada are letting
MOONEY make their biscuits,
They have found that MOONEY’S BISCUITS are just a
more appet
the product
izing.
\
of the home oven! Use
*
little’ crisper, just a little creamier, just a little thinner, just a little
MOONEY’S BISCUITS are just good enough to take the place of
MOONEY’S PERFEXSTION
SODA BISCUITS
Made in the big sanitary factory in Winnipeg.
The biscuit that’s good for eyery meal of every day, In air tight, dust proof, damp
proof packages or sealed tins,
Sudden Change
Many Cold
And Colds are the Startin
Serious Diseases.
ig Point of
You Can Make Short Work of .a Cold
by Using
DR. CHASE’S 5*20"
LINSEED AND
TURPENTIN
Sudden changes of temperature. are |
fatal in results. The shock ‘to the
human system is more than most peo-
ple can stand, end everywhere you
hear sneezing and coughing.
You may be sure that some of
these colds will develop into pneu
monia or consumption, Others wil)
settle on the kidneys, and result in
serious disease or bring on rheumatic
or bodily. pains.
The danger is in ‘etting colds run
on. By..beginning promptly with Dr.
Chase's*Syrup of Linseed and Tur-
pentine and taking small doses fre
cheok the inflammation, and soon rid
the system entirely of the cold, and
all the many possibilities
which it possesses.
Don't think that anything is good
enough for a cold. There are lots
of cough mixtures.
something that you can depend on in
time of sickness, you will be satisfied
with Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed
and Turpentine, ;
Children like it. Being composed of
simple ingredients, it is particularly
suited to their needs. Its enormous
sales proye its effectiveness.
cents a bottle, family size 60 cents, at
all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates &
| Co., Limited, Toronto.
To lessen the fire risk a German
company is making a specialty, of
steel furniture for ships, painted and
grained to resemble wood.
ee
| Growth of The Aluminium Industry.
Although the early expectations ‘of
the wholesale substitution of alum-
inium for steel and iron have not, for
very- good reasons, materialized, it
has shown such a perfect adaptabili-
ty to certain of the arts that the de- with a cunning
mand for the new alloy has grown
enormously.
From a production in the United
States of less than 100,000 pounds in
1883, in 1893 the output had grown to
$50,000 pounds, in 1908 to 7,500,000
times behind the blue uniform ‘of a pounds, and to-day it is in excess of
railroad conductor,”
traveller.
“I had occasion to go up to the
Susquehanna Railroad during the re-
cent cold snap. It was hard steam-
ing for the locomotive, and when we
got to Newfoundland the train was
three-quarters of an hour late. A
fussy passenger across the aisle from
me vas fuming at the delay.
„wonder how late we shall be
at Stroudsburg?’ said he to the con-
ductor, who came through the car
just then.
„Maybe an hour and a halt, was
the response,
“The funny pasenger ripped out a
cuss word,
‘My friend, said
gently, ‘how long are you going to
stay in Stroudsburg?”
“All night and all day to-morrow.
Why?”
you will wish that this trai
been bout twenty years late.“
The Siamese Twins.
They were coming out of the ger boys than mine for their
thirty-fourth Street side of the hotel and ny owe it all to Neave's
where one o the most important ot have the utmost
the conductor, i
„ my friend, after you have on Victoria Avenue.
in Stroudsburg twelve hour o months old that
mn ad a bit.
said the old 60,000,000 pounds.
A LOVELY
This Mother is Quite Enthusiastic
Over a. Well Known Food.
Mrs. J. W. Pateman, 34 Harriet St.,
Toronto, in Writing, about Neave's
Food says “When I first knew one of
my friends, her baby Jack was eight
months old and dying by inches. Ine
had tried three foeds because her
Jack could not digest milk. „ At last,
I fetebed her a tin of Neave's Food.
At the end of a month, Jack was rap-
diy gaining flesh and was bright. and
happy. He is a lovely boy now and
she declares Neave's Food saved his
life. And it did.
Then I recommended it to a,griend
She had\a baby
was not thriving
She put the baby on Neaye's
Food and at the end of three months,
the baby was twice the size,
1 have never seen two bigger, stron-
ares
Food,
faith in Neave’s
thespeculative cliques now in con- Food.’ 5
trol of he market makes its nightly,
headquarters.
The young man was enthusiastic, end a valuable
“There's
turn in Union,”
4 small fortune in this Baby“ by writing Edwin Utley,
he was saying. Front Street Bast,
“I've got some, and tomorrow, just the Canadian agent,
Mothers and prospective mothers
can obtain a free tin of Neave’s Food
book “Hints A) —
a
Toronto, who i
For sale by al
after the opening, I'm going to get )druggists. *
some more, You don’t get a tip
like that every day.
straight fror; the inside.”
“Sure,” remarked the other, eynl-
cr. “it comes. with the stock,”—
uck.
It comes] Lawyer (to witness):
“Now, then)
durphy, give us your last resi
Murphy: “Faith, sor, 1 dunno; b
iM be the cimitery, Oj-m Wists!“
Mr.
0
Red snow is often seen in Spring |
at the head of Alpine glaciers. Sei-
entists used to believe that the hue |
| wag due to the presence of innumer- }
able’ tiny reddish insects; but jt is
now known to be caused by a micro-
| scopical plant, which is pink when |
quently you can keep the cough loose,
for evi
But if you want;
a standard medicine of proven merit, |
‘eae for?”
25 |
| growing and a deep crimson when in |
a state of maturity. |
| Minards
Liniment fo> sale everywhere }
—
} Matching Them Up..
Mrs De Style-“ Marie, I. shall take
one of the children to church with
me.“ |
| The Maid—“Yes'm.” |
Mrs De Style—“Which one will 80
best with my purple gown?”—Ans-
wers,
|
— |
The Beauty of a Clear Skin.—Tie
condition of the liver regulates the |
conditton of the blood, & disordered |
liver causes impurities in the blood
and these sho wthemselves in blem- |
jishes on the skin. Parmelee’s Vege.
‘fable Pills in acting upon the liver!
act upon the blood and a clear, |
jhealthy skin will | follow intelligent |
use of this standard medicine. Ladies, |
who will fully appreciate this prime |
|quality of these pills, can use them |
vith the certainty that the effect wiii{
jbe most gratifying.
Tue skeleton alone of an average |
whale. weighs twenty-five tons. |
Warts are unsightly blemishes, and |
corns are painful growths. Hol-
loway’s Corn Cure will remove them.
I should think |
you'd save your money and prepare |
for a rainy day!”
| “That's what Em doing. What uo
you suppose I bought all these silk
| “Shopping again!
Strange Bird on Liner.
When the Pacific finer Oronsa,
which hag arrived in the Mersey, was
on the Patagonian coast, a valuable
white bird, with briliiant orange-ccl-
ored beak, struggled gamely on board.
It had been blown far out of its lati-
tude, but belng a rare acquisition for
English natural history it was care-
fully looked after by the bos‘un, The
wings stretch out some rour feet, and
it is of the crane or -herow family,
A triend was once talking with a
A
They have a true safety base
head, with silent tip. Will
never explode if Stepped on.
Eddy's Matches have satisfied Can-
adians since 1851—accept no others.
The E. B. Eddy Company, Hull, Canada
INSIST ON GETTING “EDDY’S”
Washboards, Wood Pails and Tubs,
Fibre Pails and Tubs.
"RELIABLE MEDICINE
Meee oR YOUNG CHILDREN
Baby’s Own Tablets are a safe me-
dicine for all little ones. They are
guaranteed by a government analyst
to be absolutely free from opiates and
other harmful drugs—that is why so
many- mothers will give their baby
nothing else in the way of medicine.
Concerning them Mrs. John Thomp-
son, Coutts, Alta, says: “I have
given my baby, when needed, Baby's
Own Tablets and think they are the
best remedy for constipation I have
ever used. I would not be without
them-in the house.” The Tablets are
sold by medicine dealers or by mail
at 25 cents a box from The Dr. WII.
liams’ Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont.
|
|
} N
}
WAE pa ah
an ec “a
ten diamonds, eb
them-notice that they dissolve
iy.
* —it's the ont: 1 recaumend
for table usp and for couking’, 86
W
Couldn't Help It.
Simeon Ford was talking to a New
York reporter about the breakages
that happen in hotels. .
“An average amount of breakages
you don't mind,” he said, “but now
Sores, Lumps”
*
re moved and
ed by a simple
crazy woman, when a stingy man and then you happen on a‘waiter or
passed by. a chambermaid whose breakages
“Do you see that man?” she said, pass all bounds of reason.”
smile. “You could
blow his soul through a sparrow’s
bill into a fly's
Mr Ford then recounted the break-
ages achieved in one day by a cham-
eye, and the fly bermaid of this stamp.
Home Treatment
N
TBE CANADA CANCER INSTITUTE, Limited
- BABY BOY}:
wouldn't wink.“
5
A Jolt to Romance.
ow about that young doctor?
s he proposed?"
Not yet. Papa nearly ruined
everything last night,”
“Just ¥ the doctor was pleading
for a peep at my eyes, papa came in
and asked him to take a look at my
tonsils.” i
The total number of Territorials
in New Zealand exceeds 30,000,
|
Minard’s Liniment Cures Dandruff.
“Last hight my wife and myself
had the most foolish squabble of our
marriéd career.”
“What was the subject of your dis
pute?”
“How we would invest our money if
we had any.”
Prodigal Son—Father,
tune
e
1 have re
‘father — Yes, gol dern ye, I
thought you'd show up about the
time spring plowin’ was done!
— 2
Through indiscretion in cating
een ee 9 mony children
ecome subject 0 u morb
caused by = irritating acids that on
violently on the Jining of tie tntes-
tines. Paine rand dangerous burg
lugs ensue aud the delicate system of
the child suffers under the drain. tu
8 cases the safest and surest
leine is ‘Dr jf, , Kellogg's D *
medi ~ it 27 u the in:
famiration aud save the child’s life.
W. N. b. No. 686.
\
1 found out after she left,” he end-
10 Churchill Ave., Toronto. -
ed, “that she wasn't a genuine cham-
bermaid at all. She was an elet-
phant trainer really, but she had Inherits a Million.
been compelled to give up that pro-, Price Goodwin Beavan is the name
fession because sire couldn’t handle |®f a farm laborer, in Breconshire,
the elephants without breaking their Wales, who is acclaimed as the heir
tusks. —-Ney York Press., to £200,000—one mililon dollars
left to him by his father, Richard
Goodwin, who died in ‘Texas six weeks
It was his first visit to America, ago,. The farm laborer has employed
and he was anxious to see as much |a golicitor of Landrindod Wells to de-
of it as possible in a short time. In vote his time to securing the inheri-
2 brief visit to the South he met an tance, and Price Goodwin Beavan has
aged negro who had been a slave. left the farm at Liwynfilly, exchang-
„How, interesting!” he remarked. ing his slouch hat, corduroys and
“And after the war you had your/gaiters for a new black suit and hard
freedom? Ba felt hat. Beavan is now being delug:
The old man looked at him half fed with hundreds of begging letters
sadly, half sheepishly, shook his aud letters suggesting 383
woolly head, and said:— ‘ for his money, besides which he is
“No sah, I didn't git no freedom—|asked to contribute to scorcs of bere
volent and church projects.
{ went and got married.”
NATURE'S LAWS.
Nature's laws if them,
2 i eae et teas ery ee
of which we fathom for you. Take the bark of the W. 1
L peg 222 „ Oregon a ' root, root, and
folden Ba 1 extract of them, with just the right
It took Dr, N pharma-
ists, many months of hard work to perfect
thls vodetsble oMfretive ond foals sxnreet of the untenee
Ma. C. W. Pawzey, of Millville, © Ut. rl. 8
to tell you that I have used — W
very in my family for twenty years, We have had a
p vba in but once during that time. I have a fai
ol ten sll well and hearty, for which, toa
we OWe thanks to you and '
J ‘ Pellets, * whol we 8
N Dr. Picren's Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate
. liver and bowels, Suger-coated, tiny granules, §
1 nn REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA.
chest, and De Brease tall and slen-
Ger, no superfiueus fat mingled with
his hard muscles, At the signal the
/ M tt le Not a City For Women Visitere te Getting “Human Interest” In the Cams | The Plllery Wes Not Abolished In Eng-
oe their lances, made e dash Explore Alone. ora Man's Pictures. land Until 1837, 1
other. . Ne foreigner knows what the Arab A. W. Dimock in Outing tells of tis |. The pinory was done away with by
at * 1 — — does. To few has it been given to un- engagement as a professional. disturber act of parliament in the year 1837, and
wou Agalr derstand what be thinks. Within bis | of snakes, lynx, alligators, tarpon, etc., | tt ts amazing that it should bave en-
His Matrimonial
8 *
tbeir lances came together. and house he is as much master in Algiers} for his came
ra man and of a partial | dored until that date, for it was a
Gt inst in one of these encounters De as he is in Mecca, 80 long as he avolds| drowning necessary to supply the hu- mode of punishmeht which could be
1
; Bresse’s jance was shivered, and he | th 1 “ty
How a . mis | the appearance of what the infidel calls] man interest.” To quote him: made so extremely barbarous as to be
11 Ven K P Soest ea ee The “murried)-evil-and' so tong as he complies with} “when & colled rattlestinke needed | a crying scandal to any nation This
a Wemes ore, hi tei ke A en, ee ee and} stirring up 1 shook a short stick in his) engine of torture seems to have been
‘the ee ee untod. Pad and outrageous to him, in respect of regi#-‘ face. It we caught a big ‘gator or kriown before the conquest under the
with bunging head cried for mercy tration, vaccination, sanitation and the} crocodile on a bank 1 was the one to name of “stretch neck,” which is pleas-
He posted the ceremony to the other Uke. keep between it and its home, lu river | antly suggestive of ite functions.
iahiia to Whee this tonmn-0F the. tour To any one who has ever seen for @/ or bay, and discourage with a elub its Edward 1. enacted that all stretch
Gouipelied nin to pobject himecit moment behind the veil of native life) advance When our captive lynx was necks ébould be made of a proper size
The shores of Lake Leman, common. — n * there Is something almost terrifying let out ot bie cage to pose it was my | so that the life of the occupant should
‘Ay called elsewhere Lake Geneva, are | the en — 228 vents about the impenetrable mystery of | business to keep him busy with teh or bot be endangered, and a print of the
“thick with historteal incidents. The| wy, 1 yd — — 1 these silent houses. Things happen otherwise lest he eat the camera man. | reign of Henry III. shows very clearly
veity of Geneva was the home of Cal- wh aoe in that land. there and human nature assumes 48. 1 was expected to hypnotize any bird, what the pillory was like in those days.
vid. Rousseau, Voltaire, Mme, de Stael 7, ion. ‘shore telegraphs * 5 pects there of which the western world from a tern to à turkey buzzard, while The culprit was mounted upon a stool,
uud other celebrities. At Chillon ts eas te Rares wok * 2 2 never dreams. I confess to being un. the camera man got lu his work. at one side of which was fixed a pole,
itbe castle where Bonivard was 80 long was ignorant of the — — easy when I see careless and ignorant; “yen tarpon Gshing was made ad- supporting a pair of boards hinged to-
n prisoner, as related in Byron's poem. 1 * westerners—certainly when I see west-] venturous, and half a dozen times a gether and with holes cut in them
“At Vevey, on a hillside some distance tting on ber castle terrace with ber ern women—walking alone in the us day I heard the shout: large enough to admit the wrists and
Wack and above the town and partly baby on her lap, looking out on the tive quarters of eastern towns. “Can't you pull your canoe nearer | neck.
Ahidden by the trees surrounding it. is placid. waters of Lake Leman. A mail| suppose one of those dark doors] the fish? I must have bhaman inter-“ ‘The hands and arms wefe thus held
“the old castle of ‘Blonay. There is u ed horseman ascended the hill and. ghould open suddenly, the stranger be est.’ on a level with the face, and the ap-
. | dismounting below where the lady gat. dragged quietly within and the door! “Then 1 dragged on the line till the | palling stiffness which this must have
ry anes
a 8 * a net im Pome — bd 2 terrace and, bending n a2 — canoe was over a fish that was bigger | caused can well be imagined. Thus
* 8 N eee “Mme, de Blonay, I ery you mercy.” it would be useless to search unless
Who built and owned the castle were Seer: oe vended page a th the ‘authorities were prepared to ran-
00
Nn e to have: 108 l fe: knight, cry mercy of me, not only with- apartments in a whole district, and to
| “wor with their sovereigns, for they All | aa but mne oa 92 —5 24 8 a
8 A ‘ revolt, at least to stir up such danger
od eee ee madam. 1 am pose 2 ous unrest and hostility as to make it
: | Bresse, 1 have met your husband impossible.
as gee Bile agh Ps ot battle, he the champion of the married | Wust might happen to that stranger
ee ne . knights of Turin, 1 representing the is best not considered. If his or her
Awenugiing over the quéstion whether single knights, 1 bave been conquered | captors so chose there would be no
ar ie made u miau Wore o meient ds by him. and by the terms of the tour- more trace than marks the spot where
eee ee " nament 1 have come to cry mercy from a stone bas fallen into the sea, Such
‘knights claimed that a wedded soldier waite” er
Jud not only be sensitive to bis repu- | As soon as Mme. de Blonay under- but it has horribly happened and might
é : stood the situation, recognizing the happen again.—Sir Henry Norman, M.
tution for bravery on bis own account,
but also on account of bis wite and en- fact: that her busband bad won a + eb
„Aren. The unmarried knights declared sory iss mattiags, ds conceived ths
den they were more ficient becuuwe iit b ot battens, but with wo-| — A ROMANCE OF TRADE.
: a meelves o for, . ;
-whereas having à lovely wife and 1 she said. e The Start and Rise of the Fameus
tile ones the dread of separation from | grant ‘you: mercy on one condition.” ; Krupp Gun Works. :
ithem by death would sap their courage. Name it, good lady.” The famous cannon foundry of
The dispute between the knights of | a you be aay guest at a feast| Krupp, at Essen, was established in
‘Turin waxed bot, and, since the due. Spich 1 Shan give in your hoer with | 1811 by Frederick Krupp. who aban-
ition could be settled only by being put doned a successful grocery business at
‘ the nobles living around about.“ 5
_tto the test, challenges began to fly bo- the instigation of two brothers na:
ttween the benedicts and the “Thanks, madame, that you accom:
g 5 : Von Kechel in order to devote
‘and it looked ne if mang families would peur your mercy with a boon instead) | the m. N
; guest te the manufacture of cast steel.
‘be made fatherless and many young t co el ada cE de | The process was then unknown in
meu well fitted to become progenitors | most willingly.” 0 ees Germany, and t rticle itself went
: Immediately Mme. de Blonay dis- „ and the
een = 8 . patched . to théwe bo By under the name of “English-steel” be-“ “Did you hear what 1 said?” ques-
2 5 vited feast, incl ber you cause it was imported from England. | tioned the man.
Se Se, ee ee ee Dpnutiul eedeln. Yolande de Vik Trupp bad money, and the Kechels bad) “Yes, 1 did.” responded the student
JL Jette. When all were assembled Mme, or Dretended to have technical know! ] wrathfully, turning and glaring at bis
de Blonay placed Yolande beside ber, edge. The ürqm started its operations | modest looking critic. “What do you
beating Coraant de Bresse where he in an old water power mill at Altenes-| know about it, anyway?"
could feast bis eyes on her beauty. ben. The experiments: of the Von} “1 ought to know something about
‘There was a clinking of glasses and Kechels were unsuccessful. Fer nearly | ft.“ was the smiling response. “It was
word of good natured derision two years they did thelr best, but all) 1 who paluted the picture.”—New York
5 (4
By F. A. MITCHEL
my bead, sometimes crashing into the | was placed in some public spot, where
‘canoe, when instead of being prompt- the riffraff employed themselves burl-
ly rescued 1 was likely to hear the ing dirt, sticks and stones at him until
call: , they were tired or until the object of
„Swim farther out, where the light | their sport succumbed, as not infre-
fs better!” quently came to pass.
It would seem that primarily the pll-
lory was intended for cheats of all
RILED THE ART STUDENT. kinds, such as mountebanks, fraudu-
lent dealers in horses, coal, corn, ete.,
and we read in Fabian that the mayor
of London in 1287 “did sharp correc
tion upon bakers for making bread of
light weight. He caused divers of
ropolitan Museum of Art in New York | them to, be put in the pillory, as also
one day when a plainly dressed man one Agnes Daintie for selling of min-
who looked as if he might be a me. led butter.“ Soothsaying and other
¢hanic approached and, posting himself magic arts were also punished with
at the young man's elbow, watched | the pillory.
him as he labored over his subject. It would appear that famous men did
“You've got the angle of the mouth | not appear in the pillory until after
wrong, and the left eye ts too oblique,” | 4497, when a star chamber decree for-
remarked the man decidedly. bade the printing of any book or pam-
The student bilnked angrily, and the phlet without permission from the
hand that wielded the brush trembled | archbishop of Canterbury, the bishop
slightly, but he took no notice of the of London or the university authori-
unsolicited criticism, ties and also made an order that any
“There is too much yellow in your) printer who did not conform to this
Sesh tint,” continued the man.
Still no reply from the student, who
ostentatiously slapped on more yellow
in the high light on the nose.
He Resented at First the Comments ef
Hie Unknown Critic,
Ap art student was copying one of
Abott S. Thayer's paintings at the Met-
through the city of London.
Stafford is told by Garrard the way
in which three men underwent their
pilloryings, “They stood two hours in
the pillory, The place was full of peo-
ple, who cried and howled terribly,
especially when Barton was cropped.
and kissed him.“ London Globe
many a >
f ; their efforts to produce “English steel” | press.
fired at the bachelor cause in the re. 9 lm. the end. Krupp. decited: te Bi Gave Him a Warm Tip.
„Would that 1 haa Set rid of them after baving spent once“ Boots and Spurs,
* he sald. . f
@ wife to defend me against this ral: |. of his fortune in experiments and] 4 contemporary manuscript account
half bens till Jou know bow,” eaid a
a took over the management of the work or the diet of Matisbon, held in 1680 by
ear a himself, :
: 0 By ae the Emperor Ferdinand II. on the oc-
„ 8 Vor a long time he had no luck, and] cagion of the landing of Gustavus
ed and lowered her eyes. it. was only after some years of disap | Adelphus of Sweden in Germany, men-
“Orles of.“ „ “Renegade!” pointment and ee that a ct weenie 4 tions as a remarkable fact that the
“and the like were buried at nim from| Teta! was Mat . it was nnd bert. Hungarian cavalry who rode through | on him, so he started op d conversa-
the bachelors present. while “Come f 1 that the business frst real. the streets to thé ceremonial wore| tion,
over!” “Welcome to our ranks!” and Pen gen to Gourish, Its exhib vette | thelr spurs on thelr boot soles, It t
similar badinage came from the mar tha ward bat 1 of 1851 revealed {0 | aificult to credit that these spurs were | up such a lot of fowls,’ he sald.
ried persons. a j 5 8 wes nie {ron pny . fixed on the flat of the boot, for thus „Not such a much,’ says I.
as the guests were gone aue 333 ; « 2 shod the horsemen could neither walk
2 declared to Mme. 1 pera yer on utry. 1 nor stand. especially when the large wants to know,
that he had had enough of the unmar- 3 et followed; and ot the spurs worn at the period is| “ ‘Powder an’ shot,’ I tells him.
| led side and, since he had become the 74 ef the n were considered. Probably the writer in“ An', do you know, he never come
smitten with ber nlece, begged that | cay py 1 . tended to indicate that instead of be. back to ask no more questions? Diplo-
she would lutercede for him with To- eet bee ing fastened to the heel in the usual | macy ts a good thing to raise bens with
ee ma ae lande. moiety 88 , fasblon — ee a. project | too. Cleveland Plain Dealer,
arene ih “How, now, Sir ‘al the ile in ; from the part of the military boot, a west:
ien ein KNTONT,”” ur BID. ag paring Page no ae tired The Winter palace of the czars was which is a portion of the sole. The Nene
many of his best officers to ub purpose, | of by a married man, do vou dullt in blood. Almost every stone of | same manuscript adds that the Hun. pr. Charcot in a lecture on antarctic
experiences” referred to the amusing
antics of the penguins, which, he said,
were very much like human beings in
their behavior. Sometimes a couple of
betrothed penguins could be seen seat-
ed close together in loverlike fashion
in a recess formed by blocks of. ice
and observation had shown that subse-
quently the same couple attended be
fore a third penguin, who might be
-called the clergyman or the registrar,
for the positions of all three were sim-
ilar to those oceupled by the minister
and the bride aud the bridegroom at a
wedding.—London News,
: : the walls and every square yard of the | garian horses had their manes, tails
‘du.erfered. Perhaps some women who now beg the e fey a married plaster ning them costa life, Nich- ** 5 e b
1 gx
e 0 f ace must be rebuilt in a year, and bats
eee e yn | 5 = reac en | what was human life against the des- Letters of . as
Tided 40 selle the matter by champion “Well, then, you must elther vin pott willt Bx thousand men were | they were called, were frst lasued in
1 ’ each side ap. your matrimonial spurs as you Save kept at work day and night. with the | the ume of Edward I. to give leave to
5 a of knighthood or | Palace beated at 80 f. to dry the walls | vetellate beyond the marches or limits
_ the chnmplon. Those agreed upon | remain a craven.” . ae „ 4. gountry.for wrongs e at
’ : to a an e hands a power nominally a
If the: ushered bim into a room with Yo | Te men 2 = work with tee pence. In this Grat instance they were
Bot their beads, and, experienc: | ined at Portugal. About 100 years
rt : later two Hanse towns in Mecklenburg.
rriageable women of her awhile De Bresse came out, strutting pon is No 38 * — wishing to relieve their prince, who
hed mt | some thousands, but the palace was Cetera imarquecthleves” Steg, 98
le 0 rque—thiev: 0
en knees cry mercy. The bachelor | more easily than ber husband uad ished. the sufferers called them-to all the
Dg
£
;
3
8 8
2
‘ |
:
3
i
5
j
8
=
Firet Mail Coach In 1784,
A theater owner was responsible for
the first mall coach in 1784. John Pal
mer, Bath, England, saw that it took
four days to get bis actors from Lon-
don. He went to the government au-
thorities and persuaded them to start a
A Wise W. 2 rascals of the Baltic authorizing them
aman. to victual the besieged „ This done,
a | New. for $2," announced the star | they turned 4 a confed
to Fazer, “1 will furnish you with 4 | eraey of sea robbers known as Victual:
philter which ‘will make your busband | ing brothers, or St.Vitallus’ brothers.
this
portumt question, Today, contests | ten: “You have conquered with man’s. — you to the exclusion of all oth and rendered the Schalung vian seas
single
7
between married and | men are 1 have gained u victory for the same | *** . ms unsafe fer half-a century. number of coaches to carry the mails
Fer e and usually burlesque. cause with woman's weapons. Tou “! don't I invest.” . decided and that these coaches should bo built
ot 80 this tournament, All knights | fenced with an inseusible lance, I with | the Practical housewife, | “But if you Reduced. fot speed aud drawn by the fastest an-
ere fighters, and he who was cousid- e ‘beautiful girl.“ have e philter which will make bn «1 near the Pudgerieighs are in great- | imdls in England. In a little while a
„ Corsant de Bresse, returning af. | bring home some of bis salary on pay cewematixcna.”
ted against the best single knight. | oa busband, excited 4 great deal daf Tt allow 700 & percentage on all 9 How did they lose their
mon de Blonay was to represent, the of merriment-in Turin. The married aum, realized.” — Louisville Courier. money F-
quarried side, while Corsant de Bresse knights welcomed him among their | Journal. “Ob, they haven't lost their money.
g Mr. Pudgerleigh bas bad hold fever
: Phere were ladies present beaded by of avotber tournament in which the Purely Speculative, aod is a — walking Pe haem and
Mademoiselle de Savoy, the uncestress renegade, should defend bis newly | “I have always been tuterested,” sald his wife has been trying 4 new avti-fat
of obe of the most beloved women of chosen side“against ove of their num- | Ite Binks, n the utilization of remed which has brought ber weight
revolution was worked.
A Gossipy Mether,
“A gossiping woman makes me
tired;” observed amall Donald.
“What's a gossiping woman?” asked
bis younger brother,
“One who tells everything she
pheth, bow lucky it was we could go catch any dsh.“ »Tust's funny,” an-
el t Consideration. abend and bolid this withont walt. swered the wife. When a girl-angles
an all women are iu favor of marriage, | take a little stenmer plying around the| “Do you think women have e sense) ing for an 5 u from
appr con- | for a bneband she bas to talk a great
OF were at tunt time, they should all lake and among other sights viewed | of humor!“ : gress,"-Wasbingtop Star. deal.” “I know.» But there's a differ
fhuve prayed for the success of the | from the boat look at Castile Blonay,| “Yes.” replied Miss Cayenne. “But — ° ence between tisb and lubsters.”
Seared Nair: Sat nen eee 1 think they bu ve become accustomed | Net en the Level. : -
___ Wietory prove thot a married man ts a n to restenin thelr laughter through s Ry is eee br He Keeps.
7 than a single mun and the baby on her lap and @ plumed knight | fear of poser oa man's feolings."— | lieved 7" 3 Agnes—Why didu’t you arrest the
N conducive o f e to 2 “Wasblogtun J ; “Why not?” se burgiur who was found under your
. ———— “How can euch es thiug as mountain | bed? Giadys—iHe‘wiid that if 1 would
Pretty Near tt climbing be om the level - Baltimore | not have bim arrested be'd never tell
American. — 4 bow dusty he got. — Harpers Bazar.
of experieoce, Dibbs-—I don't rn — :
w. The marriage certificate comes | The man who cannot forgive any | You will never “find” time for any:
pretty
script : K. L. Stevenson. 4 make l
„ MYSTIC ALGIERS. . | ‘ PERILOUS POSING. AN ENGINE OF TORTURE. |
ö
than I, which often shot ten feet over | confined and powerless, the offender
royal of the present day, the ber, who should punish bim for his de- waste Now, where do you suppose | gown nearly forty pounds, Judges | knows,” explained Donald “Mamma
dowuger Margaret of italy and sertion. But the Count of Savoy for. l, these burst Ales goin the end?” = y trary, 9 is que. Kivery dme we wisbebave abe
her of the duedi house and the bade any further fighting. and, there | “! dont know,” said the genial pbi- — ͤ — runs and tells papa.”—Chicago News.
Rovility. aut whether they were unan- being demoralization among the bach- | tosophec. “but If they go where most mesh Was Lucky,
mous or divided in their sympathies. elors ‘both on account of their defeat Doble consign ‘em there must bes tec, Wust are you smiling about?” aK A Mean Retort,
betweeu the two sides has not been aud De Bresse’s joining the enemy's | “ble smell of rubber io the hereafter.” | oq Noah. “If you don't wtup talking,” caution:
banded down through the centuries. | ranks, many more deserted. and many | Harpers Weekly, “L was just thinking,” replied Ja ed the husband. “I'll not be able to
near being one--Boston Tran- mortal thing de @ green band du life.— | thing if you want me you must) might let bis wife
Woman’s World
Wies of Prominent Demo-
orate to Have Harmony Feast.
| }
|
Ans. CHAMP CLARK—MRBS. WOODROW un-
BON.
and set up a printing press should not’, 4 Dolly Madison May time breakfast
only be pilloried, but also whipped which will bring together the wives of
Democratic leaders throughout the
country is planned for May 20 by Mra.
Champ Olark. wife ot the speaker ot
the house; Mrs. Henry D. Clayton,
‘wife of Representative Clayton of Ala-
bama, and Mrs. Oscar W. Underwood,
wife of the leader of the majority in
Dr. Bastwick was very merry. His the lower branch of congress. The
wife, Dr. Poe's daughter, got on a stool breakfast is designed to bring together
the women of the party in much the
same fashion as the men come together
from time to time at the festal banquet
“Yes, it's a lot of trouble to raise board for good fellowship and mutual
try dealer. “I'll tell you a story n It will be beld at one of the big no
that very point. A man who looked as tels in Washington, and the list of
if he hadn't bad anything to eat for a those to be invited as guests of ‘honor
week or so leaned over the back fence includes Mrs, Grover Cleveland of
of my park some time ago. | bad my New Jersey, widow of former Presi-
eye op him, and he saw | had my eye dent Cleveland; Mrs. Bryan, wife of
hic spre Jennings Bryan of Nebraska,
who three times has been the national
Must be a lot of expense to keep standard bearer of the party; Mra. Al-
ton Brooks Parker, wife of Judge Par
ker of New York, who once was the
“‘What’s the principal items? be Pemoeratie presidential candidate, and
Mrs. Adlal E. Stevenson of Illinois,
whose husband was vice president
during one of former President Cleve-
land's administrations.
Mrs. Clark is to be the toastmistress
of the occasion, and the list of those
who are eligible as guests will include
the wives of Democratic members of
the senate and house, of members of
former Democratic cabinets, of the
| Democratic governors, governors elect
or Democratic nominees for governor,
of the Democratic justices of the su-
preme court, of the Democratic nation-
al committee members and of proml-
nent Democratic residents of the dis
trict and the country at large. ’
The occasion, it ia pointed out, will
take eepecial significance from the
characteristic attributes of Dolly Mad-
won. the patron saint chosen by the
‘women of the democracy, who was
one of the most forceful women who
ever presided over the White House.
When s Weman Buys Pajamas.
bundle under ber arm.
“That young woman,” said he em-
furthermore, that she is not married.
your eyes open.
when she bought ‘em:
| “She wanted to look at some pajam-
in her voice when she added hastig
size did she want, | inquired. _
She just happened to remember that
wide as she was, and she could tel! by
use It.
The dashing baberdasher indicated
the occupant of @ polo coat that bad
just whisked out his front door with a
phatically, “bought those sunset pink
pajamas to wear herself, and | deduce,
Fou can’t help noticing little things
like that when you look at tente with
“How dol know? Let yourown ears
be the jury. Here's what happened
as, and there was a sort of vocal blush
that they were fur ber husbund. What
“Well, er—a—she wasn't sure. But
her husband was about as bigh and as
| holding up the garments and megsur-
ing the arms Whether they would at
him or not. That ancient dodge ts a»
transparent as a plate glass window
fresh from the chumols-aud they all
“If she bad really been buying 6
slumber suit for her husband she would
nu ve told me the size of bis shirts aud
lett we to Indge by that. | would also
eal) your attention to that sunset color.
“Accept d from one that's in
business. the average man ie about
conservative and careful about
shade of his mattress uniform as be
about that of bis street clothes
bls pajamas seldom, if ever.”
FF
buy him necktles
—
—
—
“
=
i THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA: tet ey
— — —— —.— 2 —— - — — BS SLATS ITS
|
low. tense voice. Good quality and
plenty.of It. We may consider our-
CANADA'BEATSTHE US , , ones
THE K . . es millionaires, That ought to
‘ make you sweat,” | mony, But for a St e * .
8 MORE HO * rang
4 0 Im very vad, old chap,” Clay sald 7 NoRS Fon . Brides in Japan follow the same
| weakly, “Having taken two boxes of, your | Custom whicl prevails in the Western
| “Kwofl, you black devil, Two hot lexcelient GIN’ PILLS, they relieved | ¥otld. that of wearing white, at the
{lime drinks. it they no come one|me so ben that 1 ara wane Sadist wedding ceremony, at least during 4
time I go. flog yo... You savee,” with the. results, I Bayy an order, to part of it. But the significance at-
A Modern Romance
| Grant erfed priskly. lay druggist about three Weoks ago tached to the choice of this color Is
By WILMOT KAYE 2 15 eee. N aie? — EA [10 Send we sone: sae. N = planned de on the two sides of
1 } Jränt moved hie bed loess to Clay's 0 bor “box J 1
= and then began methodically to um from a lady friend who is ‘also using} The Japanese“ bride fs dressed first
Prot dréss. He took oft the quinine and GIN PILLS, I have none left and am | in resplendent garments ot white silk,
‘ Sees: placed it on a tin box by his side, |Seoding you $1.50 for three boxes | the sleeves of the costume usually
The tropical sun blazed relentiess-| and then slowly got into bed, accen-| Which L would ask vou to send at | being about three feet in length,
ly on the “swish” built hut, in which | tuating each movement with a groan: ode as Lam not quite so well when} while the sash, an important feature,
— 5 2 — n “We've the Nick ot the devil.“ he am without GIN PILLS.” , | Measures about 11 feet. in 41 f
18 2 ng te the m 9 wr - The | said with a sbafl. To 80 down like | diner AGATHE VANESSE:| | But. white, ase the Oriental Review
W ag * *. — | this, just as wee struck the oll.“ in Hn Pifte md . 8 * ny pees e
ed intolerable n As oppressiveness |, No rapie came. and Olay: looked in. Torento to get hem. There ts not | parents “nate, considers netaelt dead
They were clad. Inthe sant test of 40 5 with zack lustre eyes. jing dike Gin Pills—nuthing just the in the sense that she will never ve.
garmenté, and; their flannel shirts) “Ye Mother mine, It's alright.” same or just as good. Don't accep’! turn alive, preferring death to di-
were unbuttoried, Sigcloging their * — painfully. |Substitutes if vou value your health vorce, and in consequence ict shen a
burnt skitis. | “Delirious, His mother’s been, dead | aud want tobe. cuyed of Kidney and | watte costume.
Kwon, Yow sooundrel. Brink gin ten years,’ Grant commented as ne Bladder. Trouble, or Rheumatism. in. N Arter thésexchange of cups ot
cocktail one time,” .said the youlger | leant over to feel his body. sist on having Gin Pills. 50% a box, sake with fhe , bridegroom, Which is cr
of the two men, as he stirred rest “| wish to Heaven he'd sweat. ifor 52.50. Sample free if you writs | the most important part of the wed-| New Orleans “expects to be the 4 luxuriously fitted privte car for
lessiy. . Confound the chap,” he cried halt {National Drug & 1 2 Go. of Can, ding ceremony, the bridge changes | centre. of the richest country in the | the use of bridal and theatre. parties
A don’t think 1 Should have it, Da-|@ngvily, but his anger was only « ada, dAmited, Dept. N. Toronto. 9 her costume toa red ons. ‘This is | world when the plans for, reclaiming |is maintained by the company which
vid,” Stephen Grant said reflectively. | Cloak to bis keen anxiety. — — —— called iromaoshi (changing color). the extremely fertile lands in that re. controls London's street railway , sys
“You are in for a bad go of fever], There Was. a Jook of iridecision~in | PACES 5 | Red is supposed to have a purifying
a his eyes, bi it quickly left and they arge. | power, and perhaps clears the minds
2 are carried, out tem. \
—— — ᷑ ' ͤ w»ỹ»„)7'— — — —
: | Now and then a man's eyeg would
“H n 1 “hed and | shone with resolution as he took up
hee at ianate alee Clay Gaawer- | the bottle, trom Which he shook out | Test upon ner in open admiration mourning.
ed irrhabl | two tabloids, Then he leant over, | and: us wotld turn rotind — af’ | This is the origin of: the Japanese
“A pity "we lost that quinine,” the and passing his arm under Clay, — bene Neg? 4 Sa Bion | custom pf using white costume at
other said quietly, but the quick | thrust, the quinine Into his mouth. — — N ee weddings, but many people in mod;
lunga ad hie companion was full of PE Mang as he plac- | ed. Theobal ist . 3 | ern Japan do not any longer. have
eo ue spoke he rose lazily. and went] Almost mechanfeally the fever. nae 1204 rv = bear artes 2 3 0 Seton 151 *
to the outer room, Where he gave an 9 1 he knew ing out again she almost ran into a ahead and marty according to the ac.
order in the native language. . un man, Who took’ off his hat and mur cepted ctistom, with no thought of
of the parties of alt association of
EXCESSIVE DRINKERS
REGAIN SELF-MASTER
: 3 DAYS |
at the Neal Institute will absol-
“w " "Ou. 0) x-| “After all he's: a young man .
od vata sched dips his lite before. him,” Grant thought | "Sede pels. Dr. Wat ” bh Reine: ks 9 moi i
“Telling the ‘boy’ to be quick," | Sadly.” “ih nad wee n The Primitive Kubus.
Grant lied promptly, for he had told], He in his turn was beginning to | 8& urriedly, y e bye, my
| Seng Mia ‘Grant is ill, and bm wor- A people Without any form of rell.
Kwofl to. put very little spirit into be ay bask inane 85 e ried about her. Would you come o gion, without superstition, devoid ot
the drink. see her?“ any thought of the future state, has
The “boy” in Rte a long and strenuous life that 60 far 1 5 8
3 of - * N. * * . had % nurse, but it Was ams | (To ve Continued.) been found in the interior forests of
took the latter between his hands, | daughter Anda mat was his chief 1 .
Valez, the geologist of the University.
and rapidly stirred the cocktail till | concern, for it was for her sake that Deafness Cannot be Cured cf Gredinte WHO Tek maha wabeinlte
it was a mass of foam. Not quite he ‘was strivirg for a fortune in a
0 1 th death-dealing..climate.., Save for her | N. sappiiestions, ses, Whey, eaunad rend, reach the dis | journeys through the island. . :
n with ine Pink ne was alone in dhe world, .and. she | Suesidsatuess.,ond thet is — There ue found the Kubus, as he utely cure the ‘excessive Drinker
2 of, all craving and desire for
alcoholic drink in any form, and
this without the use of hypoder- “Ne
mic injections. ‘There are no bad
Clay gulped it down and heaved a
deep sigh of delight.
That's good,” he saſd with an at-
tempt to smack his Ups, but they al-
most cracked with parchedness.
“Aren't you going to have one?” he
4 cal U
b 2 ig 2 73 N * n feta x pee E | Sietinee tied 5 ‘the sinall ed
provide for her comfort, and now, —— yen 25 . ape ot the e countries,
just ‘as he had come to the end of taken out an 2 They are Wanderers th the for-
Wis resourees, a mighty fortune loom- nine : est seeking’ food; they e no pro-
a in sight. e r eS ied Et: ben | perty. They are not ———— sim-
asked quickly. He ‘watched his companion, and ret 8 ply collectors. They seek merely after-effects. Booklet and com- N
5 suddenly gave a glad cry, for he . i suffic.ent nuts, fruits and other Sn 5 { nn *
2 aw} feb a ng taping gare could see the little beads of pergplra- . 4, 2 8 288. e 0 ran the to keep them alive. ! plete information on request.
fairly —— that I have spotted | Mon slowly r. on mis foreliead. | Lake Alle "Fis for constipation. The Rapes. Wage very little war
dhe ail. Uu the bye, Ire a few, grains’ “He's. alright. ~ Thank God, he fre ee fare upon amount ot animal —
llt. A tniak you'd better have em,, | breathed fervently. . lte in their Bil e e land .
Grant remarked as he took a small] In a couple of hours he forced him N Tae only notion that Prof. Vale
He was an old merchant who had
to take th? remaining tabloids, and 8 ; . could get from them of a ‘difference
tained about half a gozen fivegrain | ft vooner had he aocomplished it | Pullt MP a bis business by advertis:) \etween a live and awdlend person wad
tabloids of quinine: tha he fell back exhausted, fairly bonn. bid Bis Kite 0 that the dead do not breathe. He
„Dry up. It was my. fault we lost in the fever's clutches. you want on you to ; infers that they are immeasurably
bottle from his pocket, which con. The ‘Neal Institute co, Lid. :
502 Seventeenth Ave.
West.
t Daylight came with its tropical vou, wa we inferior to the paleolithie man of Eu- 405 ‘Broadway. 2244 Smith street,
Se eet ee ee suddenness, and Clay lay back, bis Oh,’ he answered, “it Isn't very | rope, who. fashioned. tools and bunt CALGARY WINNIPEG REGINA
A few days before, on their jour-
ney up country, one of their bear-
ers had dropped a small tin box, con?
taining their medieine chest, and al-
though they had gone back to search,
they had not succeeded in ‘finding it.
However, they had sent a runner
9 to the ere .
y, bu could no
Him he ordered, but speak
e eee, rn) wt eee
Grant Wer leg himself round the hut, back ‘exhausted. : 8 in a. 5 for produei . :
and then attended to his friend. He] KWofi held up the empty bott 0 It i pro | D . fea
to utilize hoppers und their eggs,
and ‘Clay halt raised himself on h
kane Rim 40 lie dawn. he plled lten,, his eyes stricken with horror, Dr n ee ee
the malaria had left him, and he lock. lh gets, good space and is well dis- ca and, knit
ed at Grant, whose eyes almost seem. Played.” is the result of 25 ubus’ anviton
ed to ‘glare ‘back at him. : ment, The words they know are al-
at eae . es ad to the most as 2 5 1 mak ag they try to
0 2 . res
The “boy” entered briskly with the .
“Troublesome ‘English.
The Liverpool tramway authorities
blankets now damp with sweat, but important what the text ig so long as ed big game with tsi tipped ar:
ou et Massa dem quinine from
* thus converting a “destroyer of the ;
“Hilda, my darling,” Grant wa 5 é than the conductor in their presence N NGTON
Fer muttering in bis delirium, “Twill erer inte er Mies material, | n ee t a for.” | gad — 1 aon | be Tor
„soon be home. And you 1 be a is Was criticized, and another ef- — WATERPR
boiling hot lime drink, which he in as made and posted: Passen. 1
princess. 1—“
9 upon Clay drinking immediate- “Stephei, old ‘chap: What have gers * requested to pay no more
: : you done?” Clay asked piteously, ’ | Perinies than for which the conductor
“That'll metry and sleep. We ‘seid | UThere they tay, ead e ; : ; in their 1 punches holes in
K Cured by Toning “the “the ‘Blood
100 ‘agony shall not be prolonged, 8 ‘the Nerves, .
“boy” stood near, and every now and it een granted a few minutes ot t is tne opinion of the best medi
then would replace a blanket that | Consciousness. 1 1 auth. after 5
„ old Grant utter: cal authorities, after long observa:
had ‘been disturbed bn his master's 5 nae: ere aud men ve are ees more
movement. 0 „ou de siven peur uu for r mie," common more serlous in the
fa 5 — elles Clay cried frensiedly. * en at any other time of the
his quick breathing, and the ery oi] eure welcome. I'm * going. ital changes in the system,
a bird in the bush. When Grant came|Xou'll be rich. Look after Hilda. after long "rouble tran the a
hack he at once went to the bedside, | You'll find her address with my pa- nuch le 2. — the familiar
and iaid his hand on his friend’s fore- | bers Good bye,’ „ere
— — 2. last Futter of the eres, “| which most-people-sufleras the re-
“Ag dry as a bone,” he sald irri-| “Good - - bye.” ee ty ye eee
tably. And 1 beileve I'm in for a| e he- bravely died, ‘and just before | ated and often overheated b. ulldings.
‘go’ myself, the sun-sank beneath’ the OMicial records prove that in
Ciay,opened bis. eyes, and. for u Way. ying, in ibis hed, waiohed the pra Penal A es 2 5
4 a u grav an lace f
— they were devoid of expres- 3. aes geet Pe, , cone eal 8 are 2 their worble anda
„ve struck it,“ Grant sai earth of West Africa hungers en, more er tun; melt
rf 1 a, in 8 ly. for its prey. ee nerve-restoring tonic
8 needed.
CHAPTER I. The antidua custoin ot taking
Versa Stafford jes? dragged | purgatives in the spring is
herself up the narrow flight of stairs | for the system really needs str:
that led to the office of ree Dang: | ening, while purgatives only wallop
erfield, the , well-known dramatic | through the bowels, leaving you w.
3 a ng Kg 1 nien . . ate ee. a the vegetables the next d The
and entered the outer room, . ym e next day.
was ihconveniently crowded by nc. the <ew, rich, red blood that feeds — * ie pationts!"=New “York boy appeared promptly! hut in his . A
térs and actresses, patiently ‘await: | Rte starved nerves, and thus cure Mall. ew York | pasket were only eleven eggs. N
ing the summons of the man who e many forms of nervous disorders, : “Ma says she will send over the '
might be about to find them * cure also such other forms of ee r ih -| other egg after a while,” he exp’
ment which bye so urgently needed, spring troubles as headaches, poor ! < 45 — ed.
field?” wha appetite, 3 Je, te Umbs, na and der v nd, the Dette poler 1 Wg Shout . the chien?
well as * 3 does
—4 eruptions. In fact they” ntti oh 2 : ‘ BD teport au :
fh e | secon. tH and # 0 See po a he 1 2
weak, tired and depressed men, wo-
were very busy, men and children. 2 kK
and I dont know as ‘ow—-—" Te Sold by all medicine dealers .
. F as hin mall at 50 cents a N
de master. suddenly appeared from the for $2.50 from The Dr. wane. Me,
‘| inner office.
exactly what the offi
‘meant ?—The London Chroni
* 8 Lost Trade.
It Was at the dentist's and Potz
was tne. abject in the chaiy ‘a miser-
ab dejected, forlorn object.
ended and the
. 11 at the .
must e u $9, he gaid at
length to the her fering a
whom he hail 9 with more
"THe JOHN McPHERSON co., ETD.,
Hamilton, Ont,
1 8 Nine a
you~ iprouilyed to — me Waiting For The Egg.
three!” Mrs Johnstone, the wife of the
new minister in a New England
town, asked a neighboring farmer's
boy to bring her a dozen eggs and a
roasting chicken when he brought
ed the torment one.
“But you yelled 80 5 that
veer ey ‘Mrs Johnson,
J want, the chicken for din-|-
ner, 0% 9 3 it. over
3 dicing Co, Brockville, Ont, replied boy, ..“t dollars to io
2 “No more today, ladies and gent. t Killed vet. OU, Bee, 4 Broadway met a thief, who tried to
Leg Like Raw Flesh from Knee Down 1 „he remarked with a pleasant ‘There are six hundred professi Un she lays. the or egg.” | knock Him 8 This is described
; e that di —Lippincott’s. in, the papers as an “attempted-hold-
little to soften the ken, story tellers in Tokio, who vant
eral disappointment, for smiles and! from house to house to spin yarns ‘at
t words do not help to fil ihe vate of 20 cents an hour. Tue
“Why are we 60 late?! up.”
Well, sir, the train in e—Shall I put on my mackln - N
empty stomachs, | story teller learms a new. set of stor- |, was behin this Who in vou opinion. i t-
Vera turned listlessly away, and jes when he fads the old ones getting pews, before . ee * . FMR ON amm hero of Dalar ex planation’ oN
wae about to leave, when she heard! worn. K. cana e BE GT ES ES, Sat 4% L repliea enden citt-
her name called.
“I can spare you a moment, Miss“
Stafford. Will you come! in?” the
‘| agent said’ win a suavily that ‘was
Too Much.
I doa’t pretend to be a 8
a dog to be out a night like doa
A local author, Whose name we 0 0 1 But
tanh : haar yi that ter who came bac and
Opinion, 5 oenned up that he wasn't the art to
bad ap) to me pretty strong-
Minard’s | Liniment relieves Nee
ae is N more yen F stuff
tte, 7
N wou't you chen your
dear?” he began W
It was a girl's basketball t. and
ner es See strenuous. mane
“Irene fainted,” cried someone.
“Steady, girls,” cried E captain.
Most | given’
Mies ‘ot te — Hera Heral ee
gai sine
‘shop’ is open for you tll twelve 0 5 ene was accepted, a tew
Er morpipg.” ‘ later the author recelved this | London empleys more tactory:work:
> ae te ee Re ; book herewith. Don't ers. than any other city ip the United
out into the keen alr of a ‘
morning, and began to 10 walk rapidly Want it on terms quoted.” Kia
\
or in an
i ‘
>
—————
—
AN Obo
MEETING
With One Who Had Been
7 In à Different Po-
sition
- By MILDRED LOUISE DODGE
| Phe social world: 4s a boiling pot.
That which ts onder goes to the top
aud after whirtitig about awhile sinks
again. The loss of fortune among the
aristocrats of Eurepe produ isas-
trous effects on the losers“ There e
ttle or no hope dt its recovery, and
they must drop to a lower scale. They
enn't bear to live among people who
have copsidered them far better than
themselves. }
There is now an American ecoloby in
every, capital in Burope, and those
who are financially able to entertain
and be entertained ba vo an easier en-
tree to the one maln social elrele pre-
sided over by royalty than any other
nationality, for the reason that since
we ‘have no titles in America no rank
is expected of us, Some years ago a
Wealthy American gentleman named
Tracy spent a month in Rome, His
wife aud daughter, Henrietta, had al-
Ways moved lu the upper circles of
‘America, and, having friends lu the
Eternal City to introducd them, they
pe 25 round themselves in the swim fat
there. a f
Heorietta Tracy was much
after by Ttalians, who would have
to marry: a beautiful Amer-
Le
75
1753
.
ee
& * * 13 5 . 5 . fs 4 Ad g E 1
au to be-
8 she sa
him 0 is a ball giv-
.
ner more than r-
Wg the one He seemed gloomy,
and Miss Tracy could pot help wonder-
: depurture, which was to take
7 next d en
A ; on. en she
* f :
2
12
= 8282
H
WE
8
>
i
15
idea in tho court of last 1
DDr.
agent throtgh which fate worked was
a per.
| after fee Ahan ee meeting with Bran-
| dint in a restauraut she advertised for
| she appointed en day and an hour when
them whom should she see among the’
dot to speuk to him as @ former fri
ee ee ot
„ chaugeur. She decided ou the latter
8 t in run automobiles!
. neue e signora. Tam sure
ure 1 should not be able to“ — He
W|. “Signor Braniiul,” said the lady.
|| aly. My father, my mother and 1
my father
| may be able to help Jou out of this
‘
*
had disappeared Rome, and no
one knew whero be had gone. , Rumor
had it that he had enlisted’ in the
French legion; that. he ha
committed suicide; that a bandit who
was terrorizing a province fn’Sicily un-
der the name of Catana was Brandint.
For awhfle these wild rumors went
Trom mouth to mouth{ then the poor
man was forgotten by the social world
uns completely as if an ocean had closed
over him,
Miss Tracy read the {nformation im-
parted, and her sympathies went: out
all the more to her former acquaint-
ance, especially, at learning that his
fall was not attended with disgrace.
It was bard for her to understand that
helplessness. under which gentlemen
of Europe, who were not born to work
experience when they are thrown out
upon the world. it does not exist—
certainly not to so great an extent—in
America.
What could she do for Brandini?
| Nothing. The pride which had caused
ulm to flee from such help as he might
have received from his friends would
| prevent his accepting assistance from
a woman be had known in that. ex-
elusive circle, One ot the unseen abyss-
es that beset the way of those who
tread roseate paths had been sudden-
ly exposed to her vision. f
The only effort Miss Tracy felt her-
self in a position to tiake in Brandinis
behalf was to inform her father of her
Meeting with the Italian with a vlew
to Jearning it anything could be done
for him. Mr. Tracy, was ne BRS to
| help one who bad contributed to his
and bis gaughter's pleasure in a for-
| eign land. He went to the restaurant
| where Henrietta bad seen Brandini,
described bim to the proprietor. and
was told that a man answering that
description had left his service on the
| day Miss Tracy bad met Brandinl.
The proprietor did not know where
he had gone, That ended the matter
tor the time belng und possibly for-
ever. n *
But Pate, who gellchts in arranging
all sorts of complications for us, Was
working the matter in his own peculiar
fashion, Many a man's career has
been determined by some slight inci-
dent such as missing a train. falling
into a river or running up against — 4
one turning & corner. In this case the
‘EASTER FINERY.
Boring Parasol in
: New Tan Shade.
IN SHADES OF TAN 4ND BROWN.
Natural shantung was used for the
cover of this new paraso} for use with
Easter tailored costumes of motatr or
worsted mixture. The parasol bas a
carved imitation ivory stick and a hem -
atifched border of cream colored tur-
feta. Such sunshades are going to
very popular this spfing. “lp
She Never Looks Tired.
Kitty Gordon. the actress, bas been
@alled “the womun who never tooks
tired.” 1
To explain ber secret, “Just take a
vacation erery two or three weeks,”
playing about her mouth, as though
she was well aware ot the reply she
would receive. But before one bus an
opportunity to answer she adds quigk-
ly: “Yet it's not nearly so dimeult
it sounds. By a vacation 1 wean a
p day's rest—luxurtous rest.
‘afford it, take Along heaps of gorgeous,
swect odored fibwers. It cannot,
then a bit of yonr favorite perfume
and one or two flowers. _ lint tlowers
von most baye. Thero is nothing in
all the world so restful or so wonder-
fally soothing. Then read your favor-
ité poems, browse in them, play, ug.
Forget you ever und a worry. it your
clothes hamper you cast them off and
dress in a single little robe de nuit.
Simply relax-every strained: ttle mus-
elo in your d und body.
It you are fortunate enough, call in
„Several little folks; be young aguin
with them. When they want vou to
‘bide under a couch, hide under it even
if you have to tip it over, it will take
N
„ nerer fall to take tufs ‘rest’ cure
(un' cure) every other Sunday. My
4 work won't allow mo to take
oftener, And; oduly, 1 never go
into the country for my rest. 1 go to
| the éity. There is too much téempta-
tion to go out of doors and romp in tho
country, and the result is that you
Some eighteen months
n chauffeur. Receiving several replies,
the applicants for the position might’
“themselves for © inspettion.
When she entered the room where they
were ussembled and cast her eye over
number but Lulgt Braudint. His mor-
tification was apparent in his searlet
face.” He made a movement to retire,
but changed his mind. It was ‘too
. 5 :
“Miss Tracy questioned’ the men one
after another. ing them as soon’
as-eiamined until she came to Bran-
dint. Tue two stood alone ben ancl
looking as if he would like to
ee oked us it she
would Une to prevent uim from doing
ia. \
For a moment she hesitated whether
portunity to relax that you~ desire.
‘Then, too, in the city, away up in your
apartment, you are isolated ff you de-
sire to bo. Von have but to leave
word with the bellboy that you are
‘out,’ and not a soul knows otherwise.
In the country every one knows wheth-
er vou are in or out..
“Your name?“ she asked.
ae
How mh experence have you had
I would not you, I should not
have a your advertisement.”
“Nevertheless 1 like your appearance
and think that, after a little practice.
you will be able to drive my auto very
well. You are engaged.” “
“Pardon me, signora, I am quite
Coiffure For the Elderly Woman.
After sixty the arrangement and care
of the hair are of nee,
and as the face fades the hair snould
be made us beautiful us is possinie.
stopped, bowed his bead and fixed his
eyes ou the floor.
“you are among friends.” ~
There was no reply to this. He
not even raise bis eyes, a *
ou Romans,“ she continued, were
very kind to us when we were lu It-
were indebted to you_gmong others
for a very pleasent’. in sour
Itallan capital. }
Quagmire tuto which you have fallen.”
Me rulsed bis eyes to hers.
consider it à favor
mit bim
Ni te
Klon at some time in his or her life.
she advises with a prankish little Smile
go Away plone where you don't see a |
soul you know and take a sunny, warm
room where you can bask. It zou can
yourself the deliglitful op-
THE REVIEW, REPCLIFF, ALBERTA.
VISIONS OF GHOSTS.
— e ‘|
They Seem to Come to About One Per- The Flowers Are Lenced te Obtain the |
_ gon in Every Ten. ; i Crude Opium.
The modern theory of ghosts tnsiste | ft is probable that fow owners ot
that invariably, when they are real flowet beds are aware that the pop
ghosts and not the spurtous product of | pies they cultivate purely for ornament
credulity and deception, they are dis- { will, it treated correctly, produce opt:
ftinctly subjective iu character abd ex. um. When the flower petals have fall -
{st only by virtue of conditions permit: | en, leaving thé seed capsule bare, there
ung their creation In the mind of the | will exude, it nn tneiston ts made in
Person pr persons seeing them. in that body, a sticky juice. ‘Chis juice |
other words, à real ghost is neger an ts opium. It vartes in certain chemical
objective phenomenon, like a te or aj qualities according to the country
house, As & psychologist would say. wherein ft is cultivated aud the vari
it ig always “a percept un lug no basis ety of plant wherefrom it is produced,
In external reality.” Less tearnedly, it} Although the poppy win grow tn al
fs always a case of “seeing ‘things most any ellmaté, it fs in the east it!
Where they ain't". That 1s to say, it is most successfully cultivated, When |
is a hallucination. | the land Bas been plowed and harrow. |
It bas been conclusively demonstrat. | ed the poppy seed is sown, about six
ed that one person out of every ten] pounds of seed being sufficient for
has experienced at least one hallucina-} one-third of an acta Just as soon as
it begins to germinate, about a week |
Proof of this results chiefly from $i after sowing in certain localities, the |
remarkable censis of hallucinations | land is divided: by furrows into rec-
originated more than twenty years ago! tangular beds about eight feet in length
at the. international congress of psy- by four in brendth. These channels
éhology and simultaneously carried on! are employed for irrigation, as the
—principally by members of the I'sy-| plants need frequent waterlbg, some-
chical Researct—in the United States, | times even until the time of maturity.
Uugland. France, Germany and other“ About two months and a balf after
countries. To thousands of persons the germination the flower appears, and its
question was put, “Have you over. four petals are,gently removed on the
when believing youtself to be com- third day after their expansion, to be
~pletely awake, had a vivid impression | pasted together with the leaves des-
of seeing or being touched by a living | tined to form the outer shell of the
being or inanimate object or of bear- opfum wake. Then after about eight
ing a volce, which impression, so far or ten days the capsules are lanced—at
us you could discover, wits not due to night—and the juice which has exud-
ang external pliysieal cause?” Of the ed from the incisions is scraped off in
27,839 replies received to this ques- {he morning with a small scoop and
tion no fewer than 3.200 were ju the) tranSferred to a metal or earthen ves-
aturmative.— Hampton's Magazine. sel. This process is repented three or
— tour * at intervats ot two or three
days, dhe fesult being pure opium,
WEATHER SIGNS. The flower petals, the plant leaves and
Some Rules That Help In Reading the; the stalks have also a consſdera ble
Clouds and Winds. Value for packing purposes. The thick-
The following formula of Weather er Portions of the stalk are used by
signs was adopted by the Farmers’ natlres for nrewood. 7
club of the American institute some The erude opium baving been kath.
pears ago; and it has been found to ered, it 1s stored by the cultivator and
givo satisfaction; a: carefully watched and examined from
When the temperature falls suddenly | tine to time iu order that no mold or
there is a storm forming south of you. | taint may attack it. Finally the opium
Wuen the temperature rises suddenly | is made into cakes, dried, packed in
there is a storm forming north of you, dotes and removed to market for sale.
‘The wind always blows froma region| New York Press.
of fair weather toward a point where
a storm is forming.
Cirrus clouds always move from na. re-
gion where a storm ts in progress to
ove of fair weather. Cumulus clouds
Always come from a region where a poubie bonehends are rare in base-
Storm Js forming. When cirrus clouds pall-scurcer than hens’ teeth, and |
are moving rapidly from the north or naturally so, for the completion of a
northeast, no matter bow cold it 46, bonebend requires vigilance and quick
thero will be rain within twenty-four thinking by the opposition... Still, dou-
hours. When cirrus clouds are moving pie eoncretes bappen ever asd anon,
rapidly from south or southeast there the most famous. one possibly being
will be u ballstorm on the mortow, if] that pulled by Cozy Dolan and Harry
it be in summer, aud ie it be in the Gessler at Chicago several years ago.
Winter there will bo snow, On this oceaslon Dolan had reac
on Nr 2 * 8 cent a second in the ninth, aud one wa
storm lu a circle. en ows from down, the score at the time belug du
the north, the Lenviest ruin 10 east ot favor of the Cubs by a one run mar-
you. It it blows from the south the glu. The next batter hoisted a. Jong
heaviest rain ia west of you. If t dy over center field. Gessler grabbed
blows {rom ine east the heaviest rain the ball and, deciding that it was the
is south. The wind never blows oven third out, tucked the ball in his pock-
moderately unless rain or snow ts fall- et aud few for the clubhouse.
ing within a radius ot 1,000 miles, Dolan, instead of taking advantage
Whenever ticuvy white frost occurs) ot the break to score the tying run,
a storm 4e forming within 1,000 miles) also ügured that It was the third out
north or northwest of you.—Cbrisan | and followed. Gessler across the field,
Berald Almanac: while a. raving mob 2 trom
, N both teams, surrounding them, tried
The “Nickel Plate.” press the horror of th
es saltrond pe 0% s 3 A of the situation
‘ound iis Origin {0 a remark made by Artie Hofman finally took ball
Jay Gould. When the road bad fatied | away from 9 * na ts
and was .placed on sale Gould entered the clubhouse and made the putout at
a bid for it. The bid was considered the edge of the bathtub. That was
unsatistactory, and Gould was urged tho richest double break on record,
by the Inferested parties” to increase but there have been a few otheiy al-
the amount, Though the road had not most as tuuny.
Fire Rig profitable, 5 ve or
Z ot construct and wor Bodyguards
BINED MOK thal he Riad offered. Weta) vor — 400 years d body of
Sn that “bid Lid was th® en bene an the. Mowteree: de. Be
Masimam nnd that be wouldd't raise | piss nave.enjoged the exclusive
If 1f the old ihe was “nickel dates, . siege of watching over the sinm-⸗
ae Me Maget bers of the lags aud queens of Spain.
X Nerthérn Venice,
The old city of Gent, m. 150
built on twenty-six ishinds, which are
connected with one another by eighty
bridges. Ahree hundred streets aud
thirty public squares are contained in
these islands. Ghent is famous be-
couse Charles v. aud John o Gaunt
were born there. It uns been the scene
of many treaties, Insurfections and te-
voltd, aud it wan there the treaty was
made terminating the war of 1812 be
tween this country and Bogiand.
— —-—t—
\
-BONEHEAD. BASEBALL.
Thie Was About the Richest Double
Play Ever Perpetrated.
bedroom of each royal personage in
the palace, and the others, armed with
huge halberds and wearing felt soled
shoes, tread silentiy- all t b the
bight along -the corridors aud balls.
Thele service begins at midnight aud
ceases at 7 in the morning,
Japanese “Silent” Musi.
A eurtous ceremony used to be per.
formed in Japan by the court mus
wick OF THE POPPY, f
Stim Lines the Thing
di Modish Underwear,
TRE BODION CORSET COVER
Pictured 1s the new bodice corset
corer, which fs a boon to the stout
women. It is very much on the order
of a brassiere, as it is perfectly fitted
to the figure and boned. in several
places. co
Another advantage of this corset cov-
er is that it 18 attached to the petti-
coat, giving a smooth hip line.
The materials used are valeneſennes
Jacé and the sbeerest of tucked batiste.
Pink satin ribbon ties the cover at the
shoulders and is run through the bead-
ing. Re ie ; i 5
Four Spring Hat. ‘
A hat is the most noticeable feature
of a woman's dress. It practically
makes or mars ber costume, The se-
lecting ot a good looking hat is simply
a question of interest in the matter.
The milliner 1a interested in selling
what she has on hand. The trouble is
the average woman fs not as interest-
ed in selecting a becoming bat as the
milliner is interested in selling what
she has on band. No milliner will take
the juterest in your appearance that
yourself.
t least every woman should know
‘berjown Hip ‘sufficiently well
to Bg an intelligent factor in clothing
her own head and not be a mere pawn
moved about at the milliner's whim.
It is all the matter of studying one-
self, of being aware of one’s own type.
Don't be guilty of extinguishing a_lit-
tle face under an immense hat or load
it with ornaments brighter than the
sparkle of your own eyes or with col-
ors that make you sallow by contrast.
It you are built on the Juno type do
not be persuaded into buying a toy
hat regardless how sag friends and
the milliner insist t your classic
braids are beautifully adorned with a
Tommy Atkins toque.
Neither should one carry respect for
one's own style to the monotonous ex-
treme of never wearlng but one kind
of hat. Each year there are fash-
ions which may be adapted to your:
knowledge of your own individuality.
Each year it is possible for the wo-
man who knows ber own face and
who has due regard for its possibilities
to frame it becomingly without sacri-
ficing every consideration of the modes.
Adaptation of one's own individuality
means harmony in hats.
A Joke on Father,
“Can you match this. typewriting for
me?” inquired u eustomer of the head
of a typewriter's office. The head of
the officeJooked up and saw a blond apd
blushing beauty of perhaps seventeen.
She was well dressed and well groom-
ed, ang a Boston bull pup of parts
strutted from the end of a Jeash In her
band,
“It's very important to match it ex-
actly,” insisted the young thing.
Thé head of the office Justegla
‘The Point of Burpriae,
“pia alice the mai over claus at certalt Shisto Both} at the paper in ber hand. “Ma
St tack cares meet tee tale ae chee | stringed sod “wind: were No. 8 matches it," sheaaid. Win you
and begged pardon 60 politely for step · used, but it was held that no sound | tell the young at No.
ping on her dress?” | sbould be allowed to upon un- what you want?“
The blond beauty and the girl at
“Why, what ts) 80 ble «bout | Worthy ears, and, as the ears
5 . S
“But, mun allve, she's bis witer.
Baltimore Amerteuu. *
tom dated back mauy generations.
(a e
Use Fer a Fi
"I let my house “and they
bave bad — 5 there. Ofcourse
we've had the place disinfected, 60 1
— 8 its quite safe, “What do you
*
“I fancy it would be al dear.
friends i sbould like to ‘help vou
vm buy your firaitute for 800 francs.
But 1 thing it would-be eafer
to a it to @ friend firét,"~London
ve
x
, , *
' househola furniture 7 © BEAUTIFUL SPRING MORN’ 7 TRIALS 655 a ‘KING 8p.
Th 0 — the tale — ta ou a cake ot . oraing — 2 on . 2 LA Rx. AN 8 : OF THE ö |
maple sugar.” 0 re 0 . mat Court Methods There Utte Thi ee)!
—. ff ̃ n ssce | ae eet ea
Disinter este was puzzled beyond, measure. There J aig ar A ros ee - ay 1 N e
Gift;
An Raster Story
was nothing to eat in the house. and
she was furnished with $25 with which
to buy a cake of ma ple sugar probably
not worth a dollar. She spent the mon-
ey for necessities,
One trait common with us alf, curb | Dew
She found that a man supposed to
*
‘
THE REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA.
, ducted under @ very simple system,
‘The larks, the thrushes, twittering wrens, though utterly different from the ays.
eee oe ge gag tem which governs procedure in Amer-
iad roll the wouaroub-Agema along prt English courts, says an er-
Oh, What a world! How fresh and sweet!| The trial takes place before three
= te Ck judges and a jury, to Which are added
*
‘
4
8
w bo the Hohle cartnata or indig, It
is ubout ¢ighteer inches long and of a
gray color. The creature is death it:
self and carries In ite head the secret
of destroying life with the concentrat:
ed agony of all the poisons. 1
life in ite dreaded relative.
osity, led her to attend the sale. She 1 9 2 a certain number of extra jurors, who The Wehle carinata is tolerably com
bar to bar the pl goog . r fn * 4 are eae an pearly) Rice Paddjng.—Wash half a cuptut
By Amelia Wright she applied to those indebted to her, The arbute aa It trailing goes, hear the testimony and are held rendy 9 fom peninsula. of rice thoroughly and soak it in cold
PP sg: Penguin *| sweet. the orchard rows, | to take thé place in the jury box of ‘ortunately, however, for man, it u water for two hours and drain. Add
. no one could spare the amount at — Make lovely every breese that blows. any juror who may in the course of dot. like the cobra. a house frequent} then three tablespoonfuls of sugar, a
| One spring day, the Saturday before peggy pga ene ee o flowers, 6 ints, © sunshine! the trial be incapacitated from further | ing fran Rages ' — 1 littlé salt, grated nutmeg, four euptule
Faster Sunday, a boy of fifteen trudg- © heaveniy ot springtime, service. Tlie depositions of all the | Would ma infinitely more to of rich sweet milk and balf a cupful of
raisins. Bake for two hours, stirring
ing along a road with a little bundle be wealthy had died and left no wl, thy 1 f This king of the does not tu
and signed before the trial begins. ing aspe not turn occasionally; then put in another cup-
pracy . so far as had thus far been discovered. W 5 an pure en the breath mach of the judges bas a copy of these to escape from man, as the cobra will, | ul of rich milk and bake for an hour
ried in bis pocket. While he was there
a girl a year or‘two younger than he
came along and sald to bim:
| “You look very tired. Have you come
tar?”
“I have walked all the way from L.
He bad left instructions that his house-
hold effects be sold at auction and all
his relatives be hidden to the sale. An
army of these persons were there, be-
lieving that a legacy would be con-
tained in some of the articles sold. As
soon as the auctioneer mounted the
©. u. BARNITZ before him. The “prosecutor and the
Wier’. 3 counsel. for the accused furnish to the
THUNDERATION, NOI court a list of the witnesses they de-
Do we-velieve thunder kilis chicks | sire called, are all summon-
in the shell? Thunderation; fot ed by the which has power to
As 4 proof for our anbellet ip tui punish nona'
tradition, note the of ittie The first
t happens when
or flash into concealment, like the ko-
riat, but keeps the path against ite
human assailant and, pitting its own.
eighteen inches of length against iti
enemy's bulk, challenges and provokes
conflict.
A stroke with a whip will cut it in
longer. Serve in the baking dish.
This is a very substantial sweet for
growing children.
Tapioca Pudding.—Sonk a cupful of
taploca overnight in water to cover,
Drain it and put it in a quart of milk
with a pinch of salt and cook until the
éince 4 o'clock this morning. 1 am go- | stand a spirited bidding commenced on robin tedbreast. Robin's nest, | the trial nestioning of two oF e clod of earth disable tt. But tapioca is transparent; then add the
8 everything that was hollow. Crockery, 5 5 5 4 id such is ita malignity that it will in
ing to the city and must reach it before kalved Sil ee the accu presiding justice. yolks of five well beaten eggs and sug-
night.” 3
“What are you golng there for?”
“To begin to make myself independ-
ent. | am a half orphan with a step-
mother. She has made it so disagree-
able for me at home that 1 can stay
to conceal a treasure went for noth-
ing. Mrs. Spellmeyer regretted that,
she had spent ber $25, for she could
have bought lots of things she wanted
for a song. But sofas, bureaus and
In Italy, as in most of continental Hu-
pe, a mah aconsed of a crimé Ia con-
by the law to be the very best
witness to his own guilt or innocence.
In England and America the accused
vite attack by every device at its com-
mand, staking ita own life on the
mere chance of its adversary coming
within the little circle of its power.
At most the radius of this circle is
twelve Inches. Within it at any point
ar and vanilla to taste; then take from
the fire and turn in the whites of the
eggs, beaten to a stiff froth. Pour into
a buttered baking dish, set this in a
pan of water and bake until the pud-
teatity 1 hooses. ding thickens; then remove the under
there no longer.” desks with locked drawers brought RY 10 n 9 Hes certain death, and on the bare ae ae water sak wie the Heat until
"re yu sr tienen the ky vo abr rg de ees f FFC
help you?” 1 0 aue ‘ sat in ite reac’ carinata throws | This is hot or cold, and, tapio-
0 torn to pleses tn the hope of Guding « 2 28 ads “ag hoger its body into a figure of eight cell. en being very digestible, 5 .
“Any money to use till you get a ne at money, stocks, bonds or jew- a right to tell his own in his Then it attracts attention by rubbing; is especially adapted to the needs of
start!“
No.“
. “What will you do for food and for a
place to sleep?” ss
“As for food, I will go hungry; as for
a place to sleep, I hear there are
benches in the parks.”
Finally some kitchen stores were put
up and among other things a cake of
maple sugar. Mrs. Spellmeyer by this
time began to suspect that the de-
ceased had intended to favor her, but
‘abe could scrape together only 7 cents
to what testimony bo received
and hat axcluded and “iy Bees
who exercised 1 | unfali
its loops together, which, from the
roughness of the ‘scales, make a rus-
tling, hissing sound.“ erects its head in
the center and awaits attack.
It is said that no one, having once
encountered this terrible reptile, can
ever forget its horrifying aspect when
invalids and children three to four
years old. a a a
French Pancake.—Bent separately the
whites and yolks of four eggs; then
put them together, adding one cupful ©
of milk, half a cupful of four, a pluch
of salt, the grated rind of a lemon and
A great pity welled up into the gitt's or the money provided to secure the Mins : ixectation thus aroused, its eagerly aggressive a teaspoonful of melted butter, Fry
eyes. Preseuitly she unclasped her palm 8 9 8 ‘oe ea ties jade te ere air. its e coils, which, in con- in small pancakes, turning once; then
d red a crisp five dollar bill. . 4 a ne stant motion one over the other and . .
and uncoves a crisp five dolla Ne ere Giics Wan. bau . the other tw one spread each with a little fruit jelly,
She looked at it longingly, then extend-
ed it to the boy. “Take this,” she said.
„My uncle guve it to me for a birthday
present, I am thirteen years old to-
day.”
up to $10, so she lost it.
rustling
ominously all the while,
stealthily but surely bring it nearer
and nearer to the object of ite fury.—
a
Harpers. hic cor ‘
roll into a cone and sprinkle with pow-
—— — — ——————————rè˖
—
“What were you going to do with it?“
+ “L was going to buy a sweater. All
the girls have sweaters, and 1 have
long wanted one. But you will need it
far more than I. It may keep you till
you get a position.” 8
The offer of this money was the only
sacrifice the boy bad ever experienced.
Tbus far whatever had been given him
had come from those whose duty it
was to protect him, but everything he
bad received had come grudgingly.
“What is your name?” he asked.
“Laura.” wis
~ ig
“Laura what?"
accuser | TWO..NEW. HATS)
who bad made purchases were still] came.a terrific thunderstorm. I. ‘essarily, the principal witness against; | n
pulling to pieces what they had bought. ning shattered the limb, and the fot f coc
I, re eee ar, halt a lemon rind and
"| Was Constant borrower ep: the vessel and
bow. A man who had purchased an baby batched out, and on the fifth comes u three cornered debate between 0
will
fron box (locked and no key) was drill. day came a second little roblul accuser, accused and
ing a hole in it with a View to Insert-| The were
ing an explosive and blowing it open.“ The birds a
A boy was chopping to piece a bureau | first gave us the slip, and the otber and Comment. wa
the drawers of which could not be re- stayed just long enough for us to snap
moved in any dther way. A young his picture to refute that old thander
cream is added t
“I want to borrow §50 for five min-
utes.” 4
“You can have it ff you will put ap
Lauras Maryweather.”
Aud you think me so despicable as
to take from vou your birthday gift?
Nothing wo nce me to do 80. 1
am gottrg to the city to make my for-
tupe. I ba ve learned the value of mon-
ey by bard knocks, and I shall take
more such lessons. I shall make peo-
ple pay me for what they get out of me,
and 1 shall work, work, work, and
Du ve, save, save, until I am rich. But
1 will do it all myself. 1 will be be
bolden to no one.”
} “What are you going to do with your
money when you get it?”
Do with it? Well, one thing I will
Bo with it—1 will hold it up to glitter
before the eyes of those who have de-
nied me those things a boy desires, and
1 will make them feel how easy it
would be to make them happy, but 1
won't.“
The girl looked at him through a pair
of eyes that grew big with wonder,
mingled with which was an expression
of reproach. Finally she said;
“Aren't you a queer boy!“ j
“Do you think that too?’ ont
“Yes.”
„Well, 1 suppose I am queer since
you say so. Others have told me that,
but | wouldenot believe them. Well, 1
must get on. Goodby.”
“Aren't you going to thank me for
offering you my birthday gift?”
“No. Thanks are empty words.”
“Well, you have taught me a lesson
In courage and independence, for which
thank you very much.”
Che boy turned away from her witb-
pub another word She watched him
till he passed out of sight, then said to
berself:
That's the queerest boy I ever saw
in my life.”
After that she went on to the village
Bod bought a sweater,
Aud what did the boy say of the girl
as he drew away from her? “That girl
Is the biggest\fool I ever met.”
Twenty years passed. Laura Mary-
weather in a worldly point of view ful
Billed the boy's opinion of her. She
gave first to others, second to herself.
As to economy, she never knew what it
meant. The day came when she passed
beyond ber father's and mother’s care
und was obliged to take care of her-
self, being compelled to work very hard
She was always giving away things
phe needed herself, taking no fore
thought for ber future and spending
what money she devoted to her own
nse. witbout much wisdom. she was
the personification of improvidence.
When she was twenty-five sbe mar-
ried a man unmed Spellmeyer, who bad
no better head for getting on in the’
world than herself. Several children
prere born to her, then ber busband
girl added to the din by trying to blow
bank bills out of a cornet's piston. At
Tus auctioneer, standing on the plat- | der.
form with a bit of paper in bis band,
rapped with his gu vel. When he had
secured attention he began to speak. | bursts men's eardrums and cracks.
“Ladies and gentlemen, the intention
of the deceased in ordering this sale
bas been discovered. One of the ar-
ticles sold, a cake of maple sugar, was
broken apart and this paper found
within; 1 give and bequeath all my
property, real and personal, to Laura
Spellmeyer, nee Mary weather.’ ”_ :
There was a bush for a moment, fol.
lowed by a bow! of disappointed rage.
he auctioneer rapped and cried above
din,
ent?”
The widow, not knowing
she was on her heels or her head, stood
composed mostly of those who had ex-
pected little or nothing, to congratulate
told him the reason for willing his
property as he did.
When journeying to the city a
less boy he had met a girl who offered
bim a five dollar bill she
ceived for a birthday gift.
he made his beir.
Mrs, Spelimeyer tried to remem
the Incident, but failed. It
curred many years before,- when
was a child, and it had passed out
her memory. N
- She was receiving congratulations,
her face wreathed in smiles, when the
lawyer asked ber if she knew how
thought of that!”
“Guess.” {
“A thousand dollars.”
“A thousand dollars! It's more than
a mililon”
“Ob, my goodness gracious! I won-
der how I came to deserve such treat
ment of my beavenly father.“
ik
E785
ation theory. : Theoretically, says 4
Of thousands of eggs set in incuba- best watches of today are
tors and under bens we bave berer actually ther both gain and.
How about the thunder of warships?
Well, it the concussion of canton
zi
He
windowpanes and stop the clocks we
hardly think batching eggs safe io
their vieluity. the
=
FEATHERS AND EGGSHELLS.
Bran has been generally discarded as
a feed or in feed mixtures for young
chicks, It frequently starts an trri-
tation of the intestinal tract witb al
af
tendant diarrbea. Dry mixed cracked
grains with plenty of sharp grit is now
1
—
*
jimcrow almost equals the preachers
at getting away with the chickens,
8 8
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region covered with
and scrub pine-
he state should stock this
pheasants. It is ideal
answer to our question “
live on in this desert waste?”
. Many of the states have
wasted good money by stocking dead
land with high priced pheasants that
wtarved to death.
To build a double wall on the north
side of the poultry house for protec
f
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211
stations
wall and make their house more
leas oben front, curtains
fronts and roosts
hi and
45
5
f
2
igi
115
The History of Arft.
“Stepmother" is a w with a com-
287
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cold
of
and a pinch of salt and stir|ipto
thickened milk. Cook one minute,
in a teaspoonful of butter and ong
of vanilla and set away to cool,
8 „
Macareen Pudding,
dainty and appetizing pud-
is made with a pint of whipped
Cream, two tablespoonfuls of gelatin,
Dissolve the gelativ in a quarter
a cupful of cold milk, crush maca-
Fold in altel
tely stimy beaten whites and whip-
‘ un
ou make the motion te ed- eet Oe and put away to get ice.
2725
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ga “Tk REVIEW, REDCLIFF, ALBERTA.
— ae. i elle = a nn — —
A Wonderful Discovery DRESS OF JAPANESE BRIDES | cape yng
NA bocksUUtr elo A CRICULTURAL
AT cur it our! IMPLEMENTS
— : 5
: An eminent selentist, the other day. White Worn for Part of the Cere-
gave his opinion that the most wor], Mony, But for a Strange Reason.
derfwl discovery of recent years was Brides in Japan. follow. the sama
‘the discovery of Zam-Buk.. Just | custom whicl. prevails in the Western
think! As soon as a single thin layer] world, that of wearing white at the
of Zuin-Buk is applied to.a wound or | wedding ceremony, at least during a
& Fore, such injury is insured: agatust part of it, But the significance at-
3 bloog poison! Not one species. of} tached to tho cholce of this color Is) ~
+ mierobe has heen found that Zam-| quite different on the two sides of,
„uk does not kill! . N the world, ‘
2 —————
Turkish Women at the Theatre.
\SHALL WE GO INTO
}
1
. ‘ Sick headaches —-neuralgic headaches—splitting
0 E. -A hotles which ia to be seen in one eS
‘Then again’ As soon as Zam-Buk] The Japanese bride fs dressed rst ot the theatres of Consiantinople el. MIXED FARMING? binding ‘Headdches—all vanish when you take
, is, applied to a sore, or a cut, or to ſ in resplendent garments ot white Hk, /feotively solves the problem of ped- | ee Na-Dru-Co Headache Waters
kkin diseaso, it stops the emarting.| the sleeves of the costume usually
ple at the back obtaining a clear Men prominent in Railway, Bank: |
view and is very much moge radical ins, and Commercial ciycles have
than the polite request made in Eug- been advising the West to adopt
lsh and French. theatres that ladies mixed farming. It is easy to give
should not mar the view of the stage advice, and frequently those who are
with huge hate. so free in handing out advice,
The notice reads: “In order to ren do so without having compre-
der the performance agreeable to all hensive knowledge ot tne subjject
those present the management of the JO? Which thelr advice Is tendered
theatre has decided that the specta- It is not to be wondered at that
tors of the first three rows should re- those in charge of the railways |
Cline, those of the next three rows should seck means to divert the cri’
he on their knees and all the others ies from themselves. When all is}
be standing up. In that way every: said and done, however, it would ap-
body will be able to enjoy the play,” pear that men charged with the cot.
This notice is followed by a sugges: duct of large operations, end whose
tion implying the Turkish wo: 8 success depends upon the confidenc |
tack: of romance: “It is atti payee for which they are able to instil in the
bidden to laugh, tor it 40 9 public, would Be. cureftil before o.
that ia being performed Le Monae pressing their views on any subject)
Artiste. “Sho min
It will be conceded that all parts of
our North-West are not equally suit-
After 10 years of Asthma Dr. J. D. able for . mixed farming. The
Kellogg's Asthma Remedy proved the |greater part of the North-West, how-
only relief tor one grateful user, and ever, is entirely suitable to raising
this is bit one cure among many, of cattle, hogs, and horses.
Little wonder that it has now become At the outset, ft might be pointed
the one recognized remedy on the out that this year, while the amount
market. It has earned its fame by/of grain shipped from Southern Al-
its never falling effectiveness. It is berta, which is almost wholly grain
earning it today, as it has done. for raising, hes been tive times as much
years, It is the greatest Asthma) as it was last year, the credit in that
specific within reach of suffering jection of the country is not as gobd
They do not contain phenadéetin, acetanilid, 7
morphine, oplum or any other dangerous drug.
280. a box at your Druggist's. See
NaTional Dave & CHemicat Co. of CANADA, Limiteo.
Keeps your Harness SOFT AS A GLOVE
. U E K A TOUGH ASA WIRE, BLACK AS A COAL
„ Sold by Dealers Everywhere.
Harness Oil we imeriAt ot co, Limited
That is why children are such friends|peing about three feet in length,
5 of Zam-Buk. They care nothing for] while the sash, an important feature,
the e¢lence of the thing. All they®measures about 11 feet in heath.
know is that Zam-Buk stops their] But white, as the Oriental Review
pain. Mothers should never forget| explains, is the mourning color in
this, Japan, and the bride, leaving her
Again. As pon as Zam-Buk is ap- parents’ house, considers herself dead
plied to a wot or to a diseased | in the sense that she will never re
part, the cells Beneath the skin’s sur- turn alive, preferring death to dl.
face are so stimulated that new. vorce, and in consequence wearing a
healthy tissue is quickly formed. This] white costume.
forging of fresh healthy tissue from After the exchange of cups of
> below is Zam-Buk’s secret of healing. sake with the bridegroom, which is
The tissue thus. formed is worked up the most important part of the wed-
to the surface and literally casts off ding ceremony, the bridge changes
+ the disé@ased tissue above it. This is her costume to a red one This is
“why Zam-Buk cures are permanent. called ftromaoshi (changing color);
Only the other day Mr. Marsh, of, Red is supposed to have a purifying
101 Delorimier Ave., Montreal, called] power, and perhaps clears the minds
upon the Zam-Buk Co. and told them of the parties of all association of
that for over twenty-five years he mourning.
had been a martyr to eczema. His This is the origin of the Japanese
hands were at one time so covered custom of using white costume at
with sores that he had to sleep in| weddings, but many people in mod-
gloves. Four years ago Zam-Buk was ern Japan do not any longer have
introduced to him, and in a few} time to bother their heads with these
months it cured him. To-day—over | questions of color, and simply 80
three years after his cure of a dis- ahead and marry according to the ac-
eake he had for twenty-five years—| cepted custom, with no thought of
he fs still cured, and has had no what the colors signify.
trace Of any return of the eczema! :
‘All druggists sell Zam-Buk at 50e.
1
WOMEN CURED AT HOME
Women's dlsorders always vield
front” the very beginning. of the
treatment to the mild, but_effec-
tive, action of Orangs Lily. Within
two or three days after commencing
us use the improvement becomes
notlceable, and this Amprovemens
., continues until the patient ts com-
pletely cured. Orange Lily is an
applied or local treatment, and acte
directly on the womanly organs, re-
moving the congestion, toning and
strengthening the nerves, and re-
storing perfect circulation in the
The Primitive Kubus.
box, cr we will send free trial box if N humantt i ‘ 1 1 | diseased parte. In order to convince all suffering women of the value of. thts
e 4 v. as it is in Northern Alberta, wher? dy, I will da 85-cent box, enough for ten days’ treatment, absolutely FRE
3 te mk 8 oan . sian . mixed farming is the rule. acht lady peqding me her address. MRS. FRANCES . CURRAH, Wirdaor, Ont &
. : postage). „ „
* 5 70. ; any though the future state, has
: ope ee eee been Toned tthe interior forests of
Sumatra, according to Dr. Wilhelm
Valez, the geologist of the University
of Breslau, who has made extensive
journeys through the island.
“There he found the Kubus, as, he
ed them, Who are scarcely to be
ruished from the small manlike
of the Indo-Malayan countries,
T are wanderers through the for-
est seeking food; they have no pro-
perty. They are not hunters, but sim-
. Ever since the railways first pene
. e found 1m rated the West, the people have 's
ii a roan ot them with our eyes Shouted every fall for cars to ship out |
. 4 the grain, but notwithstanding that
shut! thousands of miles of railways have
been built, no greater proportion of
Wouldn't Be Cheated. grain has been shipped out betore
An old north-country farmer visit-|the close of navigation than in earl
ing London put up at one of the big ler years. it would seem that no
hotels. He had barely turned in on matter what is done, the most that
the first night when the “buttons” can ever be expected is that sixty per
rushed into the room and switched cent, of the wheat crop. will be rebilp-4
on the electric light; exclaiming: . ped before the close of navigation,
The Word “Strike.”
The earliest use of the word
“strike” in the sense of stopping
work occurs in London Chronicle for
September, 1765, in connection with
a coal strike. This publication re-
ports a great suspension of labor in
the Northumberland coalfields, and
the colliers are stated to have “struck
out” for a higher bounty before enter-
SHIPPING FEVER
Influenza, pine eye, epizootic, distemper and all nos
throat — Wee and all others, no matter howe mae
pope ept from having any of these diseases with
POHN’S LIQUID DISTEMPER CURE. Three to six doses
often cure a case. One 60-cent bottle guaranteed to do
so. Best thing for brood mares. Acts on the blood. 500
and $1 a bottle. $6 and $11 a dozen bottles. Dru gists
and harness shops. Distributors — ALL WII. La
DRUGGISTB.
SPOHN MEDICAL co,, Chemists, Geshen, Indiana, U.S.A.
ing into their usual yearly bond.“ „Make haste, sir! Get up! The} and the amount that will be shipped — — :
The time-honored iflustration of pro- C hotel id an fre! if — he 5 y . oaks ST oft today Follow out this scheme 1! “T thought that in fifteen years Of
fitless labor, “carrying coals to New- the te K „„ them. alive The old man slowly raised himse he severity ot the wenrner, which, as 3 a 0 at s scheme anc . 1 thoug it that in teen years o
enallé,” appears to: dard been its growl 8 . 4 1 a on one elbow and, fixing the boy we know, is very uncertain. the farmers would have -money in my practice of medicine,” said the
/ first slap in the face during this ¢, Aw cong 5 e 1 3 with a determined look, remarked: But, assuming» that the — railways the, ae ; ah ee N et 8 Ae Sea
* strike. The Chronicle reports that 15 Neng oe leut and sombre land. Mind ye. if 1 do 1 winna.pay for were built to transport the grain as 2 pay 3 for everything they every possible foolish question; but a
5 „several pokes of coal were brought Tne 8 2 be that * 8 Valez the bed. — TI Hits. tast as it could be marketed, is ex- nes ia oth 6 a substantial .dis:}new one Wan sprung on me Feceiitly.
from Durham to Newcastle by one of sd eat fro * t Alt . . e dee bel grain growing dent tor the ey — re sige gun - Mes Bags Shigeo ttre 1 — 3
the common carriers, and sold on the 8975 i ees naan My 3 farmer and for the country? hein t Gave S 8 flamed eye, for which I presertbeg
sandhill for dd a poke, by which hg irae dead do not breathe, ble NE M r Mint tani see, gereneems were te lmpor’ Mo | latinent 49 be droves Sale ee
cleared dd a poke. London Chron: e Ai 8 Bae n JING cannot be cropped continuonsly with. best breeds of dairy cattle, and estab- three times a day, ble left the stu»
icle. ö
inferior to the paleolithic man of Ru-
rope, who fashioned’ tools and hunt-
ed big game with his flint-tipped ar-
row and- knife. Intellectual atrophy
is the result of the Kubus’ environ-
ment. The words they know are al-
most as few as the ideas they try to
express.—London Globe.
— —
Caution. -
A commercial traveller at a railway
Testaurant in one of our southern
towns included, in his order for break-
fast, two boiled eggs. The old darkey.
who served him brought three.
“Uncle” said the travelling man,
out destroying its fertility, and that lish a dairy farm as an object lesson | gery, but returned in «a few minutes,
after a time the vitality of the soil to the dairymen. The increase of | poked his head in tie dorwaly, and
has to be-restoved through fertilizers, the herd could be sold to the propri:-| asked: — l
The amount of money spent in one ws aid farms, at a rea- “ ‘Shall 1 drop this in the eye be-
4 Hurope and elsewhere for fertilizers Sonable Price. , | fore meals or after?!“
HEUMATISM WAS VANQUISHED ef af kinds rgaches a tremendous Forty years ago Denmark’ buttey
‘BY DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS sili. was unknown in England; but at the
t time it is acknowledged to be
„ We know that the average number 8 5 |
Amable Lamarche Tells How His: Kid . . 7 ot the best quality; commands the :
ney Diseas: Developed and How he of bushels of grain raised per acre highest price and is in great demand. * Pore
5 EAT WEE e e A in the United States has steadiiy 8 ren: ATLANTIC
1 “why in the world did you bring me Troublesome English. Got Relief When he Used the One 5 : *|° 'ThoBe who prefer the factory sys- STEAMSHIPS
threw Dotted eggs? I only ordered The Liverpool „ suthdrities Sure Cure. dropped off. We also know that in tem could unite and establish cream- > >
the older parts of Manitoba the aver | cries and cheese factories on the
. e age number of ushels of grain raibse,! 3 4 1
splendid cure by 2 og, eer ler acre is steadily diminishing, an} rege fig N and operate them it |
n cured d all realize that i will be but a he benente reeultme from dairy |
able Lamarche is the person 13 hi comparatively short “ime when the farming would be manifest on every
and the cure is vouched for by his same thing will happen iu the newer acre of farm. It. would increase the |
numerous. friends. . 1 portions of the North-West. fertility of the soil, and there is no
cian 1 orale, my trouble we har ype 9 4 look to, the pre- branch of the farmers calling that eu
0 ö i sent, bu t Pe. -fear- . - 5 ,
Mr Lamarche says in telling his o the future. A Godfear-| would give beter returns on the capt: | at 1
uy
two.” 4
“Yes, sir,“ said the old darkey,
bowing and smiling, “I know ‘you
did order two, sir, but I brought three,
because 1 jus“ naturally felt dat one
of dem might fail you, sir.”"—Har-
per's Weekly 4
have furnished two quaint additions] ‘Lefaivre, Ont. (Special) —-Another
to the literature of notices. Some
years ago this notice was posted in
the Liverpool cars: “Passengers are
requested to pay no more pennies
than the conductor in their presence
punches holes in their tickets for.”
This was criticized, and another et-
fort as made and posted: “Passen-
gers are requested to pay no more
Lady Smuggler’s Ingenuity.
One of the most Ingenious of mod-
ern smugglers has been trapped. A
ing man who is tillirg the soll looks 7 The breed
2 “ appetite tal and labor invested, e }
we 2 8 a to the, time when he will be sue. ing aud fattening of nogs in connec: |
3
7
17
1 5 pennies than for which the conductor g . ceeded by bis children, and he should tion with the dairying industry would art
Or eee ee oe — in their presence punches holes in weer 1 Pak Meg ** — breeetye to these children thenr birth. aleo be a source of large revenues. Empress of Brig. May 11
was pres — her their. tickets.” This, too, was pro- ; eg right, instead of wasting il 1 dition to loaning money to far
- bs were ~
nounced @ failure, and the officiaa|persp:red freely, ms „Is it not a shame when we goj|mers aud dairymen, the Government Rates:
roncluded' that language had not yee heavy and 1 ne Sens" tnrough the country in the fall, to should furnish capital to assist in the Empresses: * nae ey
been invented which would express, tion seross symptoms. developed find our whole North-West lighted. ap erectlon and equipment of flour miils,/] oper ships: $50.00 Second, $31.35
what they felt. But don’t you know| “When my | simmiiie "that my dt, night from burning straw, straw best and pork packing houses, beet Thin.
exactly what the official notice into rheumat — cause of the trou. haf might be used 10 feed cattle, |sugar factories, and other organized and detatis from any
meant?——The London Chronicle, kidneys were ted to take Dodd's Kid. which would bring a handsome re-|industries to help farmers to dispose Re Tareas aa 1. Agt
— — ble and I 1 * bones made me a well turn to their owner, 7 of their products in a concentrated || © hare Aven winalpes,
Sis eae Gees ses Bee] ORL Sra, oleae We set e e e ye e trees |
It wag at the dentist's and Potz 8 ickly develops more or less capital is required to en- Nou ‘ “ . :
was the object in the chair a miser- i gan ger e diseases, zure Success in the dairy industry, wheat and direct their attention. o — —
able dejected, forlorn object, ; — 3 good health, cure the first Borrowing>money at 10 to 25 per gent other branches of 1 3
The operation was ended and the symptoms with Dodd’s Kidney Pills, {is out of the question. t Finally, the rg is! speed 4 at
dentist was ostentatiously cleaning They never fail. The Government onghi to establish N 7 : ere ae cone |
eee as 3 at the result AE tat eee farmers’. banks, where farmers could devoted to wheat —ralsing,
of muscular efforts.
“I must charge you $9," he said at
Not until many trips had been made
did the Custom officials discover that
in addition to the shaggy coat pro-
vided for it by nature the dog had
been furnished by its owner with a
second skin, formerly the covering of
a larger animal, Under its artificial
coat the dog carried a small fortune
in d nds every time it läuded in
New York.
MOTHER POF
Special Notice
‘Agents wanted to buy junk for
h dre : ion companies, and tend to prevent |
what! Another new dréss?|get loans to buy cattle, erect build- t 4
3 needn't be cross. 1 ings on the most modern principles relieve the pressure on the transpor-
7 length ta the suffering patlent, h ught it with my own money. in which to house them, said loans to | tation companies, 1 sa to * B. SHRAGGE
; whom he had treated with more] pather— Where did you get it? bear a low rate of interest, say at vent such a wheat blockade as the} cor King & Sutherland, Winnipeg,
force than skill. i Daughter—I sold your fur coat.— Tout or five per cent, ‘repayable in in-|.Western farmer: is now suffering | * Man. 4 ;
The unlucky victim turned upon inustrated Bits: stallments running over a number of | from. i a ee : 5
1 R his 1 ; Pe: x faxs — — — 5 r 8 15 — — gral May Adont The Metric System. |
I H SI Hi “What! ne jollars? .] with a view to making farmers’ Thased, an e buildings ere „ civilized world has only one —— in Some nema 8
j 3 j i to churgze me only daughters more content to remain at dhe money borrowed. . The Gover it of. monsurement in common—
y : it of
ernment of the Nether- ment otight also to appoint thorough- un
eae — aaah aa th various parts le qualified men o superintend the —— E 3 on i]
of the watios -pehoole: af. house ally erection, of the bulldinaa, and. teach bart eth time it takes the earth to
to. which other bratiches eventually the, farmers how to Make bulter and 4 0 .
y » added cheese on the most approved prin- | revolve. 0
we oes : ciples, The marketing of the pro- Ure systems vary. However, it now
duce should be done by men appoin-| has beer ropposed poet voip 3
ted by the Government, who know all shall adopt the metrie sy a 2
about the market, and the, value of | was invented in France. t *
5 i . {dairy products, so that farmers may its basic unit the 7 a 1 2 of
A plea for the reindeer and the] 1 consider MINARD'S eee full value for thelr products. the distance from the earth's equa-
“Yes,” agreed the tooth tugger
cheerfully, that in truth was my
contract for the performance.”
“Well,” queried the tormented one.
“But you yelled so loudly that
you've scared away three other
three dollar patients!"-New York
Mall.
.
—
musk ox is made by Kuud Rasmussen the BEST Liniment in-use, Tuis plan was adopted in Denmark | tor to the pole.
and Peter Freucehn, the Danish polar many years ago, and is im operation Bowers I you love the Tad love the girl, why
and it was as Well a5 | — | don't. you
5 2 propose?
day N BLOOD Mowers “Pm afraid she woilld in-
Yours rey truly, ’ sist on having the picture of her fa-
T. G. ;
: ILLEN, * “igh ther and mother hanging in our par-
1 * Nieht, der. ese indian Root Fe 0
* all but extinet in pe York dist Healed Mr. Wilson's Foros 3
D 93 ‘ieee Julius, a negro, whe tived on a plan-
Mush anew ae.bow only tepnd in Ws . When the sewers of the body—bowels, [tation at a distance from town, con. AGENTS WANTED.
lesmere Land, and se 7101 hunters — — 2 skin ducts—get ed up, |tided to his master that he-wanted te] Write for agency for our special to
are Gaid Na. 04 Bee ating them Wt) n- two mundredtl auntversary of| the quickly becomes impure get married and asked if he would get | order tailoring for your town. There
a . the foundation ot the Royal Society frequently sores break out over the him a license. js money in it. John Dawson, Ltd.
body.
A concern in Buenos Ayres, Argen- | Of London Will be ‘celebrated July 10 W as Mr. Richard | “On, yes, Julius; 1 will see to that.“ Church gt., Toronto.
- to 18, 1912. London, Ont., hut when he went to the court house 5
eee ee | Sak oo the “Wood. HE ito wet the. Hoense Re, did. nol know. | eee
witho tilizing materiale. it e proposed|/™Mrs. Brown never sits up to wal 10 ? the name of Julius’ inten „ on ELLIOTT, SPECIALIST. PRI-
% will as te Milser pern und thelr Sad, tor her husband. e. 2 bare * im, He thought, however, that he had) vate diseases and. drink habit.
* oti thus converting. a destroyer of the A
otieed the man ing attention to N N
A certain Kitt wh had the license Write 41- Queen Baa, Toronto
made out In her name, Martha,
“You-all didn't forget that. leense,
did you?” asked Julius, anxiously, as
soon as as his employer returned,
“No, Julius; but you giau't tell me
tho girl's name. Was it Martha?
“No, sah; it wasn't Martha, it was
Eliza.”
“Well, that’s too. bad. You will
have wait until 1 go to town again
avd | will get another lieeuse.”
“How much dat license costs iu
-|quired Julius. 5
“Pitty cents.” ;
“Well, 1 don't regkon the's fifty
cents’ worth o difference 1 . deu. eee 5 Wi
Jes’ sib me de license au Ill marry 5
Martha.“ WW. N. C. Ne. 895.
9 oi
1 | “No. When she expects bim to be
* . ſout D n. the
alarm-clock at three o'clock, and when
it goes off she gets up and dresses,
and de ready, refreshed and reproagh-
ful,”
—
Minard’s Liniment Cures Burns, Ste,
Parson—“Well, deacon, I hope my
sermon this morning proved restful
er Deacon it inly did, par-
inb, or He Alen like a baby through it
all. 4 3
Germany possesses only 35,297
miles of railway. :
— — |
A man who had gone to Australia
bn a visit. met with an = accident
which necessitated the amputation of
of his legs. Writing home to
phe Navy of the German Empire
is 3 ~ command of
the German Emperor.
* i — —
saa . N 2
a a r — — — —— — at om . * 1 - -
8 ee 1 . n preempt ann —
7 2
‘ \ 1
‘ . 5
— . —ꝗmG᷑—P—ÿ0
The Imperial Bank of Canada
Sheep and Weeds, __
THE REDCLIFF REVIEW 2
“SUPREME”
FLOUR
Made by the Most Experienced Millers in the
most modern mill.
{ There is no branch live | wy F ae
Capital Subscribed - 66.005,000 | stock production that Ge be Nin Anm
is ce e pores earried on to better advantage Subscription - - $1.50 Per Year
Capital paid up - = _ $6,000,000 in connection with extensive! Advent AAS 9
Reserve : . - $6,000,000 ‘grain growing ina short grass 3
Total assets $72,000,000 ö
country than sheep raising. FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 1912,
The romson for this Iſes inn | eet
one fundamental fact, namely, | 4
we large number of weeds that REDOLIFF NOW SHOWN.
“L sheep willoats-Thore are 300 dif-
|ferent weedsand grasses known
to Canada.
HEAD OFFICE
D. R. WILKIP, Prestdént
TORONTO
HON. ROBT. JAFFRAY, Vice-Pres.
}
|
i]
— — — — 1 :
The following was received by. the
editor in answer to an editorial we
Of these sheep ent | published afew weeks ago, and es-
SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT
Deposits of $1.00 and upwards received and interest allowed from date of |
, ~
? 260,. Horses and cattle eat only | plains itself: ,
Deposit. | abaut 75 1 ; } seal ine avy, Alta., June 6, 1912,
Drafts and Money Orders Issued. / . editor, The RRVUInw.“
The greatest pest on our Redcliff, Alta,
Redcliff Branch —
. ARE Sil 12
| western farms is weeds, It is citizens of Redcliff, would advise that
safe to say that, taken as, a our 1 have been instructed to
Dear Sir: For the information of the
We Sell A on its Merits.
R. G. WILKINSON, Manager
show Redcliff on our ma Hope to
Brings joy to every housewife who uses it. Try it and be
convinced.
LET US BUILD A HOME
FOR YOU
Rr
MADE BY THE
5
whole, the produetiveness ‘of |
our land devoted for ten years |
to exclusive grain. growing is
reduced one-third by, weeds |
alone.
Whatever
be able to show this change very
shortly.
Yours truly,
R. G. MCN ETLEIE,
District Passenger Agent.
will solve e BOOST--DON’T BOAST
weed question in Alberta is
5 > : i Medicine Hat News.]
worthy of attention. Wuat- [From the Med ¢
Ver sei mata l While the local newspapers of this
si pro = land every other town in these west-
ness of our land demands atten- | orn countries are “boosting” week: in
tion by Alberta grain growers. and week out, for the benefit of their
. several communities, What are the
To Study Dry Farming. | business men and people doing for the
Lord Kitchener has advised the newspaper, for the litter cannot ex-
United States department of Agricul- ist on words of, praise alone, The
ture of the intention of the Soudanese | pest booster a town can have is the
government to send a representative local paper, and it fairly represents
to North America to study dry farm- the enterprises of the place in which
ing methods in the United States and | itis published. For instance, at the
Canada, Lord Kitchener hopes to present time we are trying to attract
improve the methods of cotton and attention abroad and to draw people
grain cultivation in Egypt, and the here. A glance at the advertising
Soudanese have heartily co-operated | columns of the Jocal papers should
in his suggestions to make a-year’s | give an outside some idea of the
study of the wethods-of dry farming. | town’s business interests. Apply tlie
PN CE A test and note the number ef business
WHY DON’T YOU? | men of the town, merchants and man-
| ufacturers, whose advertisements are
Redcliff Mill & Elevator
Co., Limited
REDCLIFF : : 4 : 4
Terms, One-quarter Cash, Balance in Monthly Payments, With
Interest at 8 Per Cent. :
1
ALBERTA
SEE OUR PLANS
REDCLIFF REALTY
COMPANY, Limited
Redcliff Brick and Coal
Oo., Limited
Manufacturers of
5
ry
; *
Wire Cut Building Brick, Fancy Pressed Brick, in different
Shades, and Hollow Brick.
Redcliff, Alta.
Some things there are Which you
can't do,
For which you weren’t intended,
But there are paths you might pur-
sue
Up which you've never wended.
in the local papers, The papers push
and boost week in and week out, but
far from all help to support thé pa-
pers,
Imagine the mental picturethis town
: Why try to de what can’t be done, Wonld present to the outsider picking &
— \ While that which can is waiting? up the paper and glancing over it, if :
; : 5 7 The little things not yet begun the name of every business firm ap-
: ‘ it i ne an d Shi e Might prove so compensating. peared in the advertising columns in
: rs rs ‘A smile for those who find it hard the local papers, even if it took only
Owners of the Townsite of PP | To face the world of sorrows. an inch of space. 5 i
5 f Cc U Ah, say, what is there to retard The local newspaper should be a
. 5 0 oa That smile from you tomorrow? business directory of the town.
N g > bess pe 18 one whose day e ae
; near ande ö ;
‘ N E.. D i S POSTMAN TO SELL STAMPS _
: eee is : : And e the end more cheery? ‘AND POSTAL ORDERS
: ; Our modern and complete plant, together with our high-grade raw If but a smile comes back to you, CRBS 95,4
2s a material, ensures quick fulfillment of all orders with the You'll be the gainer, won't yout The Canadian postoffice department
highest grade product made, Give us A8. i — 3 you? has decided to improve cho rural
i * 8 —Spring Poet. | service of Canada within the next few
g . 5 : a chance to quote on your : i months to the extent of granting the
3 é requirements, FE . sion as the rae gegel for transact-
: ; f ng gen postoffice iness, When
Can ad ian Invest ments or Sa e. the courier drives up to the mail box
é : ‘ ; in front of the farmer’s home, he will
Ins ; : a Apt 1 27. * be prepared to sell stamps, issue
if 0 8 * 51 cash, balance on easy terms. postal order notes or money orders
u ran ce, 5 Ans i e Balmoral street, Medicine and to accept letters for registration.
. mi ; If the proposed new system works out
¢ ge 8 successfully it will no longer be nec-
1 J y . f essary for the farmer to visit the post-
—— Redclifi Clay Synopsis of Canadian Northwest| o hes engt in cases. of
; in of special busi-
; . : Land Regulations, f There a “4 l t about 1
1 ** St g : very routes in ‘Canada, represen
Agents for Any person who is the sole head of ing approximately 20,000 King Ed-
al t a fan or any male over 18 years! ward boxes. This humber is divided
Royal Insurance Co. Aetna Insurance Co. f * n ld. may hom a among the provinees as follows: |
ad | Ee erect eee
ws 8 1 ‘an or „
b Hartford Insurance Co. Providence Washington In- a S mntat appear in at 18. New Brunswick 27, Prince Edward
Guardian Assurance Co. Insurance Co, Agency for the distiee 3 *
Atlas Assurance Co. Redcliff, Alberta ;
London Assurance Co.
Phoenix Assurance Co. of
London
e eee father e,
son, 1 brother or sister of in-
tend mesteader. 4
x months’ residence u
8
be Island 32, Manitoba 17, Saskatchewan
12, Alberta 20, British Colaumbit 11.
Ontario has the largest nuniber
for the reason that it has the most,
applications. The awakening to the ~
advantages of the service as mani-
fected in the petitions received have
: Manufacturers of piven | — least 80 acres solely own- prada Ng ne
North British & Mercantile Insurance Co. : 225 r — vib en ho —
‘ man GRADE FACING, COMMON BUILDING AND ter? Roosevelt Favors
; 7 j Bi, 1 . a n votes for Women
VITRIFIED FOUNDATION AND SEWER BRICK, deter section fae" his home: N 1585
, ; stead, Price $3.00 per acre. Duties—
Atlas Lumber
— —
HOTEL
Must reside six months in each of six
let te of homestead entry
A
da-
ing, the time required to earn
— patent) a cultivate fifty
acres extra. 0
Theodore Roosevelt announced last
Wednesday afternoon, through Judge
Ben. R. Lindsay, of Denver, that he is
in favor of women suffrage in the
Compan td ; 58 United States and that the platform
ps p * L ** We Solicit Our Share of Your Patronage. his homestead right and cannot obtain | which he will submit tothe Chieago
R E D Cc LI — F Formally 1 . a pre-emption may enter for a pur- convention will contain an unequiv-
‘Bowman-Sine Lumber o, Ltd. | ; chased — bare alte Mater | ocal declaration to that effect.
. ‘ : elephone 7 1 2 9 R 416, reside six months in each of A ; ‘ ;
; * De Sy § acres and erect. a WM. STEAD LEFT
Wholesale and Retail Dealers In Ce. Seal miele ‘rights may be ABOUT $65,000,
NOW MeLACTILAN FFT Pe
Lumber, La C bar nagt nt more tan 180 en me will of the late Willan O° 2
. ’ th, ©, ile the Trme to Order Your}. Waal be leased to one individual or | Stead, who was lost in the Titauie
. ne New Hotel Now Shingles, Plaster company. <A royalty at the ot is published. The famous journalist
pen, Splendid accom- SPRING & & McLEAN 2 Per tou shall be collected on jeft his estate, which amounts te
modation for Mouldings. SUMMER SUITS en, about $65,000 to his Widow. An ex-
1 12 eee , e f Deputy of the Minister of the Interior, tract from the will reads:
af ms 5 r —— — — a "B.--Uuauthoriaed 8 hand over for- execution all my
verything up-to-date. ar sady: gement w. „ vate papers, manuscript, letters.
supplied with the best FLOWERS & Have All the Latest Patterns eat writing diaries pe every-
Liquors and cigars. MONU CARPENTERS AND ; thing of an autobilogical and personal
MENTS J. RIESER Subscribe interest, to my. eldest daughter, Re-
RATES: $2.00 PER DAY . : d Gente’ Talle telle, to be dealt with at her sole dis-
First-class livery in connection.: 2 * tor , f cretion.”
PATTERSON & 00. REDOLIFF, ALTA. for
. Funeral Directors and Embalmers
> see s 394 Toronto Sucel
MANAGER f . Yooom, ’ * — Manager **
Phone 190 , i